The association between U.S. Poison Center assistance and length of stay and hospital charges

Abstract Context. Poison centers (PCs) play an important role in poison prevention and treatment. Studies show that PCs reduce system-wide cost by reducing the number of unnecessary visits to emergency departments and by providing improved patient management. However, there remains a debate regarding the impact of PCs on patient outcomes at the hospital level. Objective. To evaluate the impact of PC involvement on length of hospitalization and total hospital charges. Materials and methods. We conducted a retrospective analysis of inpatient cases treated in Illinois hospitals in 2010. We linked the Illinois Poison Center database with an Illinois hospital billing dataset and controlled for important patient-level and facility-level covariates. Results. In the multivariable model, length of hospitalization among PC-assisted patients was 0.58 days shorter than that of patients without PC assistance (p < 0.001). Hospital charges for PC-assisted patients in the lower quintiles were significantly higher than patients without PC assistance (+$953; p < 0.001), but were substantially lower in the most costly quintile of patients (−$4852; p < 0.001). Balancing the higher charges for treating patients with PC assistance in the lower quintiles with the savings in the highest quintile, among inpatients there is a potential cumulative decrease of $2,078 in hospital charges per 10 patients. Discussion. Among the inpatient cases, PC assistance was associated with lower total charges only among the most expensive to treat. However, this outlier group is very important when discussing medical costs. It has been repeatedly shown that the majority of treatment costs are attributable to a small fraction of patients as seen in this study.

[1]  Matthew J. Martin,et al.  A simplified set of trauma triage criteria to safely reduce overtriage: a prospective study. , 2009, Archives of surgery.

[2]  Saakje Mulder,et al.  Incidence and costs of injuries in The Netherlands. , 2006, European journal of public health.

[3]  H. Luft,et al.  The costs and outcomes of restricting public access to poison control centers. Results from a natural experiment. , 1998, Medical care.

[4]  A. Bathke,et al.  The Effect of Poison Control Center Consultation on Accidental Poisoning Inpatient Hospitalizations with Preexisting Medical Conditions , 2008, Journal of toxicology and environmental health. Part A.

[5]  H. Spiller,et al.  The Value and Evolving Role of the U.S. Poison Control Center System , 2009, Public health reports.

[6]  D. Spyker,et al.  2010 Annual Report of the American Association of Poison Control Centers’ National Poison Data System (NPDS): 28th Annual Report , 2011, Clinical toxicology.

[7]  F. Lovejoy,et al.  Effectiveness of a regional poison center in reducing excess emergency room visits for children's poisonings. , 1983, Pediatrics.

[8]  Frank LoVecchio,et al.  Poison control centers decrease emergency healthcare utilization costs , 2008, Journal of Medical Toxicology.

[9]  L. Bero,et al.  Health care cost effects of public use of a regional poison control center. , 1995, The Western journal of medicine.

[10]  J. Fastbom,et al.  Prescription drugs , 2012, Scandinavian journal of public health.

[11]  Z. Vassilev,et al.  The Impact of a Poison Control Center on the Length of Hospital Stay for Patients With Poisoning , 2007, Journal of toxicology and environmental health. Part A.

[12]  M. Singleton,et al.  Comparison of Incidence of Hospital Utilization for Poisoning and other Injury Types , 2011, Public health reports.

[13]  Carlos Alberto Silva,et al.  Impact of a poison control center on the length of hospital stay of poisoned patients: retrospective cohort. , 2011, Sao Paulo medical journal = Revista paulista de medicina.

[14]  T. Miller,et al.  The impact of poison control centers on poisoning-related visits to EDs--United States, 2003. , 2008, The American journal of emergency medicine.

[15]  T. Miller,et al.  Costs of poisoning in the United States and savings from poison control centers: a benefit-cost analysis. , 1997, Annals of emergency medicine.

[16]  B. Jansson,et al.  A small fraction of patients with repetitive injuries account for a large portion of medical costs. , 2004, European journal of public health.

[17]  C. Steiner,et al.  Comorbidity measures for use with administrative data. , 1998, Medical care.

[18]  Shou-Yen Chen,et al.  Triage vital signs predict in-hospital mortality among emergency department patients with acute poisoning: a case control study , 2012, BMC Health Services Research.

[19]  W. King,et al.  Poison Control Centers: Can Their Value Be Measured? , 1991, Southern medical journal.