Frequency and Clinical Description of High-Cost Patients in 17 Acute-Care Hospitals
- 7 June 1979
- journal article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 300 (23) , 1306-1309
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm197906073002304
Abstract
To assess the potential impact of national "catastrophic" health insurance on the medical-care system, the frequency and clinical characteristics of high-cost patients were surveyed at 17 acute-care hospitals in the San Francisco Bay Area. The percentage of patients whose yearly hospital charges exceeded $4000 in 1976 ranged from 4 at a community hospital to 24 at a referral hospital. Hospital costs charged to these patients ranged from 20 to 68 per cent of total billings, with the highest percentages generally occurring at large referral hospitals. Forty-seven per cent of adult high-cost patients had chronic medical conditions, and only one in six suffered from an acute medical "catastrophe." In addition, more than 13 per cent of high-cost patients died in the hospital.Keywords
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