A Prospective Investigation of the Impact of Alcohol Consumption on Helmet Use, Injury Severity, Medical Resource Utilization, and Health Care Costs in Bicycle-Related Trauma

Author(s):  
Daniel W. Spaite ◽  
Elizabeth A. Criss ◽  
David J. Weist ◽  
Terence D. Valenzuela ◽  
Daniel Judkins ◽  
...  
2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (23) ◽  
pp. 1983-1992 ◽  
Author(s):  
Soheir S. Adam ◽  
Charlene M. Flahiff ◽  
Shital Kamble ◽  
Marilyn J. Telen ◽  
Shelby D. Reed ◽  
...  

Key Points Depression was found in 35.2% of adult SCD patients and was strongly associated with worse physical and mental quality-of-life outcomes. Total health care costs for adult SCD patients with depression were more than double those of SCD patients without depression.


2007 ◽  
Vol 25 (18_suppl) ◽  
pp. 4032-4032 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Zachariah ◽  
J. James ◽  
C. K. Gwede ◽  
J. Ajani ◽  
L. Chin ◽  
...  

4032 Background: Diarrhea is a common side effect of chemoradiation for pelvic malignancies. Octreotide acetate has been shown to control grade 3–4 chemotherapy-induced diarrhea in >90% of patients. The primary objective of this randomized placebo-controlled phase III study was to determine the efficacy of long acting octreotide acetate in preventing the onset of grade 2–4 diarrhea. Secondary objectives were to assess the impact of diarrhea on chemoradiation delivery and medical resource utilization. Methods: Eligible patients (pts) with primary anal or rectal cancer, and scheduled to receive concurrent chemoradiation to a minimum dose of 45 Gy using pelvic field sizes greater than 10x10cm, were enrolled. Pts with history of pelvic radiotherapy, chronic bowel disease, diarrhea of grade ≥2, or colostomy were excluded from the study. Pts were stratified by RT dose (<50 Gy and ≥50 Gy), chemotherapy (bolus and continuous) and gender. Pts were randomized to receive two 30 mg intramuscular injections of octreotide acetate (Sandostatin LAR® Depot) or placebo. Injections were given between day -7 and day -4 and on day 22 (± 3 days) of RT. The primary endpoint was incidence of grade 2, 3, or 4 diarrhea (CTCAE v3.0). Assuming a 45% placebo incidence rate, a one-sided chi-square test (alpha 0.05) would require 226 pts to detect a 42% reduction in incidence due to octreotide acetate. Results: The study accrued 233 pts (215 analyzable), 106 pts in the placebo arm and 109 pts in the octreotide acetate arm. The majority of pts (80%) on each arm had rectal cancer. There was no statistically significant difference in incidence of grade 2+ diarrhea (p=0.21) with 52 (49%) and 48 (44%) in the placebo and octreotide acetate treatment arms, respectively. There was also no statistically significant difference between the treatment arms in chemoradiation delivery or medical resource utilization. Conclusions: Prophylactic use of octreotide acetate was not shown to significantly reduce the incidence of mild, moderate or severe diarrhea. No significant financial relationships to disclose.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 2393-2393
Author(s):  
Maria Teresa Petrucci ◽  
Elisabetta Calabrese ◽  
Anna Levi ◽  
Vincenzo Federico ◽  
Michela Ceccolini ◽  
...  

Abstract Background. Few data are available on the impact of multiple myeloma (MM) on Italian healthcare expenditure and society broadly. This is especially important because of the increased prevalence of MM in Italy. Aim and methods. The Co.Mi.M. study is a cross-sectional retrospective, prevalence-based study (Tarricone, Health Policy, 2006) that involved 5 Italian hematologic institutions and designed to measure resource utilization associated with MM management in terms of direct and indirect costs in a societal perspective. A specific questionnaire was administered to obtain anonymous, subject-level data on health-care utilization and costs in 236 subjects with MM. Quality of Life (QoL) data collection was included in the protocol. Data sources included clinical records and interviews with physicians and patients. Four disease-phases were considered in a stratified distribution that reflects real clinical practice: asymptomatic (“watch and wait”); symptomatic, receiving an autotransplant; symptomatic, receiving drugs; and plateau/remission. Costs were identified over 1 year of disease management with regard to: drugs; visits; laboratory tests; hospital admissions; support devices; home assistance; travel; and reduced productivity of patients and caregivers. Costs for lost working days were derived according to the human capital method using national average earnings per working category. No clinical outcomes were collected. Health-related QoL was measured using the EORTC QLQ-C30. Results. The sample distribution was as follows: 16.5% asymptomatic; 12.3% symptomatic, receiving an autotransplant; 44.5% symptomatic, receiving drugs; and 26.7% plateau/remission. The average social costs per subject per year were €20,868. Direct health-care costs (hospitalizations, drugs, diagnostics, visits, etc) were €16,867 per subject per year; direct non-health care costs (transportation, hotels, paid care, etc.) were €1,776 per patient per year; indirect costs (productivity loss) were €2,225 per subject per year. The average direct health care costs per subject per year in the different subgroups were: €755, €53,102; €18,882; €6,803. The groups with the highest resource utilization were (b) the autotransplanted and (c) those receiving drugs. Specifically, 95% of total hospitalizations were related to autotransplant. Conclusion. The main resource utilization comes for direct medical costs. MM treatment strategy has changed dramatically in the last years. In particular, transplant and pharmacological treatments represent the most relevant costs, although counterbalanced by the highly increased clinical outcomes reported in the literature. After year 2000 the post-relapse survival has steadily improved. In particular, an improvement in survival amongst patients who had access to one or more innovative drugs has been demonstrated (Shaji Kumar, Blood, 2007).


2016 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 307-311 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruna Camilo Turi ◽  
Henrique Luiz Monteiro ◽  
Rômulo Araújo Fernandes ◽  
Jamile Sanches Codogno

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