Abstract
Study design
Retrospective chart analyses as part of a quality improvement project.
Objectives
To demonstrate treatment of pressure injury (PI) in patients with spinal cord injuries (SCI) and analyse costs using the “modified Basel Decubitus Concept”.
Setting
Inpatient setting of a specialised acute care and rehabilitation clinic for SCI.
Methods
Complex treatment courses of four patients with chronic SCI and PI stage III or IV were described and costs were recorded. The total healthcare services’ costs per patient and different profession’s involvement were analysed in relation to patient characteristics, treatment phases and milestones demonstrated.
Results
The treatment of PI stage III and IV in patients with SCI included input from plastic surgery, rehabilitation medicine, nursing and other involved professions. Recommended interventions were chosen according to the “modified Basel Decubitus Concept”. The cost course of PI treatment in patients with SCI depicted the multimodal treatment concept, including three clinically and financially relevant milestones (debridement, flap surgery and mobilisation to wheelchair) as well as the highest costs in the functionally highly dependent patient. Acute care and rehabilitation overlapped with different intensities during the whole treatment process.
Conclusion
Multimodal treatment concepts connecting acute and rehabilitation care were applied in these complex health conditions. Cost-explication models including treatment phases and milestones helped to understand resources more easily and integrate aspects of process-based management and quality of care. Scientific evidence is needed to create a recommended quality standard in line with adequate financing of this health condition.
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Introduction
Pressure injury (PI) stage III or IV in patients with spinal cord injury (SCI) is a health condition that involves complex treatment concepts with multi-layered aligned involvement of different disciplines and professions. The treatment of PI involves cross-sectoral treatment aspects of acute and rehabilitation care [1,2,3,4,5,6]. It is the second most frequent complication [7] in individuals living with SCI and generates the highest costs among all SCI complications [8, 9].
PIs are classified according to the National Pressure Ulcer Advisory Panel in six degrees of severity (°III = full thickness tissue loss, °IV = full thickness tissue loss with exposed bone, tendon or muscle) [10]. With an increasing knowledge about the physiology and risk profiles in the development of PI stage III or IV [10,11,12] and short and long-term effects of different medical and surgical treatments [13], recommendations including different treatment elements came up [2, 5, 6, 14]. These concepts include preconditioning of the PI with pressure relief, highly specialised surgery procedures with different flap techniques and complex inter-professional interventions including nursing, nutrition and psychotherapy, physiotherapy and occupational therapy [15,16,17].
For optimising complex treatment courses to guarantee quality, clinical treatment pathways are increasingly recommended [18]. The implementation of clinical pathways should lower complication rates, shorten lengths of stay and reduce resource-use without adverse effect on patient outcome [18]. Detailed analyses of these complex treatment interventions are often missing and understanding between quality assurance, health professions and economists is low. To understand the emerging cost of a treatment course, the origin of costs in such a complex treatment concept needs to be explained. Criteria of a clinical pathway [18], such as treatment phases and milestones, might improve the transparency from a clinical perspective and translate it into cost terms and quality. In addition, information on patient characteristics, such as diagnoses and functioning according to the bio-psycho-social model [19], might explain the complexity and costs even more.
The aim of this study is to describe patient characteristics, interventions and costs in the complex treatment course of four patients with SCI and PI stage III or IV during their inpatient stay.
Methods
Design
We performed a case study as part of a larger quality improvement project with the following propositions, hypotheses and expectations:
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Through the demonstration of phases and milestones in a continuous process of PI stage III or IV care, treatment principles could be used for the development of quality assurance.
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The application of clinical treatment pathways connects acute and rehabilitation care.
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The analysis of the treatment processes and costs improves the understanding from a clinical and economic point of view. This understanding assures confidence of clinicians, economists, society and affected patients.
Study setting
This research was conducted at an acute and rehabilitation clinic specialised in the care of patients with SCI. The clinic is committed to a process-based corporate development. As part of a continuous quality improvement specialised clinic, inter-professional quality circles are responsible for best clinical practice by defining standards of care and implementing quality controlling as in the case of PI treatment.
The modified Basel Decubitus Concept
The treatment of PI stage III or IV in patients with SCI follows the six treatment principles of the “modified Basel Decubitus Concept” [1, 5, 14, 20, 21].
Luscher and colleagues [20, 21] first described the “Basel Decubitus Concept” for PI stage III or IV in patients with SCI in 1992, including (1) Pressure relief, (2) Debridement and infection control, (3) Wound conditioning, (4) Treatment of risk factors and nutritional optimisation, (5) Flap surgery, and (6) Prevention of secondary complication and education.
Based on years of experience, this concept was modified and an international collaboration re-evaluated the different components of the “Basel Decubitus Concept” in several consensus conferences. Although single aspects are evidence based, the concept in its complexity has never been proven.
The modified “Basel Decubitus Concept” includes the following relevant single intervention components and relevant milestones displayed schematically in Fig. 1 and described in detail in Table 1.
Study population
Patients with an SCI, who were admitted for flap surgery of PI of stages III or IV, located sacral, trochanteric or ischial, between March 2016 and March 2017, were included in the sampling. The patients were selected by convenience sampling balanced for different characteristics.
Data collection
Data collection of patient and treatment characteristics
Patient data were collected retrospectively from a patient’s chart review according to recommended standards [22], including gender, age, lesion characteristics, PI characteristics, treatment milestones, complications, antibiotic treatment for osteomyelitis and length of stay.
Collocation of health service-related costs
Healthcare service cost data were summed up in different disciplines and profession-specific categories (Table 2).
Health service-related data were collected from the central service management of the hospital that provided a main data set (plastic surgery-related costs, nursing, therapies and counselling, ward and laboratory costs) (Table 2). In addition, daily prescriptions of special medication and daily time in minutes (hours and minutes) of physical and rehabilitation medicine physicians were documented manually.
All service data was grouped into patient weeks constructed in 7-day steps from admission onwards over the whole inpatient stay. Data were controlled for plausibility and corrected if necessary by the research team.
Health services were recorded in different units in the clinic, as tax points, time units, number of services or monetary unit. The cost calculation into monetary units was performed through specific calculations. The complete costs were compared to the patient cost rates of the clinic, which are calculated for each patient by the finance department.
Results
Case description
Patient characteristics are described in Table 3. None of the patients developed a complication related to PIs after flap surgery, such as delayed wound healing or similar. Patient (P) 2 showed the highest functional dependency. P1 and P2 had a cervical SCI. P1 was the only patient not suffering from osteomyelitis. P4 was early-discharged 5 days after the first-ever mobilisation in wheelchair after treatment.
All patients followed the usual treatment including all milestones and treatment phases. P3 represented the longest inpatient stay with 92 days compared to the shortest inpatient stay of 55 days (P4). P2–4 were immobilised for a period of 6 weeks due to osteomyelitis leading to an antibiotic treatment for 6 weeks (Table 3).
Particular healthcare services' costs
The particular healthcare services’ costs of the grouped professions of all patients during the inpatient stay are illustrated in Fig. 2. All patients’ treatment costs corresponded to the proposed continuous treatment phases. Three of the four milestones were depicted in the cost courses of professions. Debridement, flap surgery as well as the increasing therapy and counselling costs around the wheelchair mobilisation build up cost peaks. All patients showed continuously and predominantly high nursing costs compared with the costs of other professions. Within the first 5 weeks, the peaks in laboratory costs were explained by the investigation of peri-surgical diagnostics, infection control and nutritional status in P2–4. The slightly higher costs of medication of P2 illustrated more expensive antibiotic medication of this patient. All patients indicated an increase of additional medical consultations costs in the last 2–4 weeks of their inpatient stay. For most of the therein-comprised interventions, a change of body position is required, justifying why these interventions were not effectuated earlier in the treatment process during strict immobilisation. The health service cost calculation and the cost calculated by the finance department of all four patients did not differ.
Total healthcare services' costs
The course of total health services’ scaled costs per week is illustrated in Fig. 3 for all patients. Scaled costs represented the plastic surgical milestones of the treatment in all patients by clear cost peaks in the respective weeks (P1: week (W) 1, P2: W1 and W3, P3: W1 and W5, P4: W2). On suture removal, all patients showed a decrease of costs compared to the previous week. For the wheelchair mobilisation, P1, P2 and P4 showed an increase of day costs compared to the previous 2 weeks. The scaled costs of P3 increased after the first week of mobilisation.
The cost courses of the included patients were found to reflect the treatment course (Figs. 2 and 3). Clear congruence was found for two of four clinical treatment milestones as well as the treatment phases with slightly lower costs during the phase before mobilisation (Figs. 2 and 3). While the plastic surgery interventions were financial relevant milestones, suture removal was not found to reflect its clinical relevance as a milestone in financial terms. Mobilisation in wheelchair in this sample did partially support its financial relevance as a milestone despite its clinical relevance for the patient (Figs. 2 and 3).
Discussion
The cost course assured the implementation of the “modified Basel Decubitus Concept,” demonstrating the intensity of the different therapies during the treatment phases. The treatment of PI stage III and IV in patients with SCI included interventions from plastic surgery, rehabilitation medicine, nursing and other involved professions. The cost course of PI treatment in patients with SCI depicted three clinically and financially relevant milestones (debridement, flap surgery and mobilisation to wheelchair) as well as the highest costs in the functionally highly dependent patient.
Patient data and health service-related data
This study investigated data of four patients with SCI and PI stage IV at the most frequent localisations of PI sacral and ischial with a higher percentage of PI with osteomyelitis (30% compared to 75% in our population) [5]. Length of stay in our patients with 55–92 days was within the range of a retrospective observational cohort study [2] and shorter than the average length of stay in previous research with an average of 98 days [5]. However, the research of Wettstein et al. included 47% PI of the ischial region, estimated to be related to prolonged wound healing and therefore longer length of stay [2, 5]. In the present research, only P4 had an ischial PI.
Both the shorter length of stay and the absence of PI-associated complications lead to the assumption that in the present samples the most expensive patients with PI and SCI are not included. Among the included patients, no PI-associated complication occurred, contrasting with previous research. Complication rates in this health condition range usually between 30% and 50% [2] and 35% for non-SCI PI patients [23]. Complication rates are related to the length of stay [2] and simultaneously to the overall costs [2, 5]. This fact does not influence the main topic of the study to demonstrate congruence of therapeutic intervention and cost course but it has to be taken into account when talking about quality.
Process-based treatment concepts and costs
Patients passed through all the stages of PI treatment according to the treatment process [1, 14]. The method of detailed analyses in this four purposively selected patients clearly confirmed exemplarily the implementation of the “modified Basel Decubitus Concept” [1] including a complex interdisciplinary and inter-professional treatment process.
The plastic surgery interventions play an important role in the treatment of the PI stages III and IV from a clinical perspective [1, 14] and triggered relevant costs as shown from the economic perspective. The surgical and anaesthesiologist procedures not only include many different treatment processes and a quality assurance that is not part of this level of analyses but also explains the cost intensive period. Also the wound conditioning and pressure relief between a debridement and flap surgery or even before debridement had a bearing on the treatment and financial process indicated by initially high nursing materials and airflow bed-systems [1, 14]. The time-consuming, specialised wound care and the complex care during complete immobilisation explained the nursing costs of the included patients, mainly in the pre- and early post-surgical phase. A constant presence of specialised health professionals during all phases was shown and confirmed the relevance [2, 14].
Post-flap immobilisation prohibits different interventions, which include the active participation or mobilisation of the patient to achieve best tissue healing at the level of different layers [1, 6]. Thus many examinations are not allowed during this period and reflected in slightly lower costs during this period compared with the phases of admission or discharge indicated by higher costs of different additional examination such as e.g. urodynamics. These examinations are usually part of regular annual SCI controls and the organisation of these preventive measures during the mobilisation phase express a patient-centred care to reduce organisational burden compared to a later outpatient planning. However, the support of health professionals was inevitable during the immobilisation phase to prevent complications related to the PI or complications provoked by the immobilisation such as frequent complications like pneumonia [2] or internistic health conditions such as anaemia in combination with SCI and PI.
The suture removal during the post-flap immobilisation phase triggered an increased number of therapeutic interventions, for example, suture massages, strengthening of upper extremities and stretching lower extremities the week before mobilisation in the wheelchair. The expected increase in costs could not be calculated by the presented data. Therapists adopt their intervention to the intended goal and can use the intervention time either for prevention as respiratory training or transfer training, therefore an increase of costs did not appear.
The “modified Basel Decubitus Concept” also includes transfer training, evaluation of seating position, initiating functional electrical stimulation and education with an integrated individualised psychotherapy as secondary prevention to reduce recurrence rates usually being between 20% and 50% during the first year and later on [2, 24, 25]. These activities explain the ongoing high costs of therapy intervention in the last phase of the treatment.
The permanently high remaining nursing costs during the whole treatment process were explained by low patient functioning related to tetraplegia. P2 with the highest functional dependency of the included patients caused the highest costs. Nursing services were previously found to be the most prevailing service provided to neurologic patients [26] and inducing one of the highest costs among neurologic inpatient services [27]. Higher average per-day nursing time minutes than in previous data [28] are possibly explained by the higher functional dependence of the included four patients during immobilisation phase, thus functioning information is crucial to achieve adequate cost transparency already during acute treatment phases [29].
Regarding costs and quality, the middle- and long-term effect of complex intervention is crucial. The concept aims at reducing complication and relapse rates, as well as related sorrow and costs. We exemplarily showed that process-based management is also applicable in complex health intervention as part of a quality assurance programme. The combined principles of process-based management, evidence and consensus-based standard might give the fundamental information for reimbursement according to quality assurance programmes [18, 30].
Although long-term evidence to reduce recurrence for these interventions does not yet exist, a discussion concerning the need of these interventions as part of a quality assurance or reduction of complex intervention treatments to reduce costs is still needed. First guideline development activities concerning this topic came up and supported the implementation of best practice. A structured consensus process to agree on a standard and a prospective cohort study in different specialised centres might help to increase knowledge in this complex field even more.
Implications
Incentives of reimbursement models and casemix systems are in discussion in many healthcare systems. As the present study supports the higher costs provoked by a higher functional dependency and the relevance of functioning information for casemix systems [9, 29], further studies need to model the effect of functioning information also for rare but cost-intensive health conditions such as PI in SCI. An in-depth understanding of the effect of functioning on costs will assure care for these patients in the future.
Process-based treatment concepts including patient relevant characteristics as baseline, components of inter-professional treatment and milestones as well as standardised documentation of complications can build the foundation for transparent reimbursement models [18]. An international guideline including best evidence and highly specialised experts might provide confidence from clinical and economic sides to guarantee best quality of care in this complex health condition.
Limitations
This research treats data of four cases and analyses the data deeply. Therefore, the results have exploratory character and do not allow for conclusions in a larger sample of patients with SCI and PI.
In service data collection, the sharpness of different variables varied and some data might be missing despite the data plausibility and quality control due to the complexity of collecting service data and their respective costs. The individually collected patient-related costs do not fully cover the real complete costs in the hospital. Some general hospital costs cannot be allocated to the individual patient.
Conclusion
The cost course of PI treatment in patients with SCI reflects the treatment phases and three of the four milestones as well as highest costs in the functionally highly dependent patient. The presented data on costs therefore improve the coincident understanding of the clinical and financial aspects of the treatment process. Multimodal treatment concepts connecting acute and rehabilitation care need to be favoured in complex health conditions. Clearly, this research supports the consideration of treatment phases and milestones of a complex treatment concept.
Data archiving
Original data are stored at the clinical trial unit of the clinic.
Change history
08 May 2019
A correction to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
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Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank all the professionals at the SPZ for contributing to the data collection. We would like to thank John Leen for his precise comments and adapting the English if necessary.
Funding
The Swiss Paraplegic Foundation Nottwil, Switzerland supported this study.
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Conflict of interest
There is no conflict of interest with any organisation regarding the material investigated and discussed in this research. This research was undertaken during an internship at the Swiss Paraplegic Centre and as the master thesis of the University of Lucerne.
Statement of ethics
The superordinate quality assurance research project of this study holds a declaration of no objection by the Ethics Committee northwest/central Switzerland (EKNZ UBE-16/003). The included patients consented to the use of their data for retrospective data analyses. The study complies with principles of good clinical practice and institutional requirements. The process of conducting this case study is based on the Standards for Quality Improvement Reporting Excellence [31] and the “Consensus-based Clinical Case Reporting Guideline Development” [32].
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Meier, C., Boes, S., Gemperli, A. et al. Treatment and cost of pressure injury stage III or IV in four patients with spinal cord injury: the Basel Decubitus Concept. Spinal Cord Ser Cases 5, 30 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41394-019-0173-0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41394-019-0173-0
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