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Pulmonary rehabilitation programmes improve the health of patients disabled by lung disease but their cost eVectiveness is unproved. This cost/utility analysis was undertaken in conjunction with a randomised controlled clinical trial of pulmonary rehabilitation versus standard care.

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Medical Advisory Panel, TEC Program, Blue Cross Blue Shield Association
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Objective: To determine the hospital cost of caring for newborn infants with congenital syphilis.

Study Population: All live-born singleton neonates with birth weight greater than 500 gm at an inner-city municipal hospital in New York City in 1989.

Methods: We compared the characteristics of 114 infants with case-compatible congenital syphilis with those of 2906 infants without syphilis. Cost estimates were based on New York State newborn diagnosis-related groups (DRG) reimbursements adjusted for length of stay, birth weight, preterm delivery, and selected maternal risk factors, including infection with the human immunodeficiency virus, cocaine use during pregnancy, and history of injected drug use.

Results: For infants with congenital syphilis, the unadjusted mean cost ($11,031) and the median cost ($4961) were more than three times larger than those for infants without syphilis (p 0.01). After adjustment, congenital syphilis was associated with an additional length of hospitalization of 7 1/2 days and an additional cost of $4690 (both p 0.01) above mean study population values (7.13 days, $3473).

Conclusions: Based on the number of reported cases (1991 to 1994), the average annual national cost of treating infants with congenital syphilis is approximately $18.4 million (1995 dollars). This estimate provides a benchmark to assess the cost-effectiveness of strategies to prevent, diagnose, and treat the disease.

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Journal of Pediatrics
Authors
Ciaran S. Phibbs
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A population-based probability sample of elderly individuals (n = 426), who were originally studied between 1981 and 1986 (mean age at initial study was 72.5 years), were followed for mortality. Those with > or = 30 respiratory disturbances per hour of sleep had significantly shorter survival (p = 0.0034), but the respiratory disturbance index (RDI) was not an independent predictor of death. When Cox proportional hazards analysis was done, only age (the strongest predictor), cardiovascular disease and pulmonary disease were independent predictors of death. It may be that factors that are secondary to or associated with sleep-disordered breathing (SDB), such as cardiovascular or pulmonary disease, predispose these elderly to death.

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Sleep
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Bypass Angioplasty Revascularization Investigation (BARI) Investigators (Writing Committee: Alderman EL, Andrews K, Bost J, Bourassa M, Chaitman BR, Detre K, Faxon DP, Follman D, Frye RL, Hlatky M, Jones RH, Kelsey SF, Rogers WR, Rosen AD, Schaff H, Sellers MA, Sopko G, Tyrell KS, Williams DO).

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New England Journal of Medicine
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Mark A. Hlatky
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"Defensive medicine" is a potentially serious social problem: if fear of liability drives health care providers to administer treatments that do not have worthwhile medical benefits, then the current liability system may generate inefficiencies many times greater than the costs of compensating malpractice claimants. To obtain direct empirical evidence on this question, we analyze the effects of malpractice liability reforms using data on all elderly Medicare beneficiaries treated for serious heart disease in 1984, 1987, and 1990. We find that malpractice reforms that directly reduce provider liability pressure lead to reductions of 5 to 9 percent in medical expenditures without substantial effects on mortality or medical complications. We conclude that liability reforms can reduce defensive medical practices.

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Quarterly Journal of Economics
Authors
Daniel P. Kessler
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