Postoperative complications: how much do they cost?
- 1 July 1986
- journal article
- Vol. 68 (4) , 199-202
Abstract
Complications following major abdominal surgery incur considerable expense. The aims of this study were to analyse prospectively the costs of complications following major abdominal surgery and to compare such costs with those of elective distal large bowel resection. Six patients undergoing elective resection for large bowel cancer were studied at the Royal South Hants Hospital between January and March 1983. The mean cost of resection and primary anastomosis, without postoperative complications, was pounds 1,364 (n = 4). Indirect costs accounted for 38%, nursing 25%, medical staff 13%, investigations 8% and consumables 16%. The operation itself accounted for 12% of the total. Complications following major abdominal surgery were studied in a further ten patients. The costs of complications not prolonging hospital stay were: wound infection pounds 64-146; chest infection pounds 21-27; urinary infection pounds 3-6. Complications prolonging hospital stay resulted in considerably greater cost: pelvic abscess pounds 1245; myocardial infarction pounds 476; subphrenic abscess pounds 857; colostomy retraction pounds 764; wound dehiscence pounds 599; incisional hernia pounds 1723, and major chest infection pounds 258. Owing to high fixed costs, the main factor in determining cost for bowel resection and complications was length of hospital stay.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Survey of Clinical Trials of Antibiotic Prophylaxis in Colon Surgery: Evidence against Further Use of No-Treatment ControlsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1981
- Reduction of Operative Morbidity and Mortality by Combined Preoperative and Postoperative Nutritional SupportAnnals of Surgery, 1980
- Postoperative Wound InfectionAnnals of Surgery, 1977