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The Economic Burden of Prematurity in Canada

Resource type
Date created
2014
Authors/Contributors
Author (aut): Johnston, Karissa
Author (aut): Gooch, Katherine
Author (aut): Korol, Ellen
Author (aut): Vo, Pamela
Author (aut): Eyawo, Oghenowede
Author (aut): Bradt, Pamela
Author (aut): Levy, Adrian
Abstract
BackgroundPreterm birth is a major risk factor for morbidity and mortality among infants worldwide, and imposes considerable burden on health, education and social services, as well as on families and caregivers. Morbidity and mortality resulting from preterm birth is highest among early (< 28 weeks gestational age) and moderate (28–32 weeks) preterm infants, relative to late preterm infants (33–36 weeks). However, substantial societal burden is associated with late prematurity due to the larger number of late preterm infants relative to early and moderate preterm infants.MethodsThe aim in this study was to characterize the burden of premature birth in Canada for early, moderate, and late premature infants, including resource utilization, direct medical costs, parental out-of-pocket costs, education costs, and mortality, using a validated and published decision model from the UK, and adapting it to a Canadian setting based on analysis of administrative, population-based data from Québec.ResultsTwo-year survival was estimated at 56.0% for early preterm infants, 92.8% for moderate preterm infants, and 98.4% for late preterm infants. Per infant resource utilization consistently decreased with age. For moderately preterm infants, hospital days ranged from 1.6 at age two to 0.09 at age ten. Cost per infant over the first ten years of life was estimated to be $67,467 for early preterm infants, $52,796 for moderate preterm infants, and id="mce_marker"0,010 for late preterm infants. Based on population sizes this corresponds to total national costs of id="mce_marker"23.3 million for early preterm infants, $255.6 million for moderate preterm infants, $208.2 million for late preterm infants, and $587.1 million for all infants.ConclusionPremature birth results in significant infant morbidity, mortality, healthcare utilization and costs in Canada. A comprehensive decision-model based on analysis of a Canadian population-based administrative data source suggested that the greatest national-level burden is associated with moderate preterm infants due to both a large cost per infant and population size while the highest individual-level burden is in early preterm infants and the largest total population size is in late preterm infants. Although the highest medical costs are incurred during the neonatal period, greater resource utilization and costs extend into childhood.
Document
Published as
BMC Pediatrics 2014, 14:93 doi:10.1186/1471-2431-14-93
Publication title
BMC Pediatrics
Document title
The Economic Burden of Prematurity in Canada
Date
2014
Volume
14
Publisher DOI
10.1186/1471-2431-14-93
Copyright statement
Copyright is held by the author(s).
Scholarly level
Peer reviewed?
Yes
Language
English
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1471-2431-14-93.pdf 664.59 KB

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