Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3447542 | Archives of Medical Research | 2006 | 8 Pages |
BackgroundThe aim was to determine the direct medical costs in patients with partial refractory epilepsy at the Mexican Institute of Social Security (IMSS) in Mexico.MethodsWe carried out a multicenter, retrospective-cohort partial-economic evaluation study of partial refractory epilepsy (PRE) diagnosed patients and analyzed patient files from four secondary- and tertiary-level hospitals. PRE patients >12 years of age with two or more antiepileptic drugs and follow-up for at least 1 year were included. The perspective was institutional (IMSS). Only direct healthcare costs were considered, and the timeline was 1 year. Cost techniques were microcosting, average per-service cost, and per-day cost, all costs expressed in U.S. dollars (USD, 2004).ResultsWe reviewed 813 files of PRE patients: 133 had a correct diagnosis, and only 72 met study inclusion criteria. Fifty eight percent were females, 64% were <35 years of age, 47% were students, in 73% maximum academic level achieved was high school, and 53% were single. Fifty one percent of cases experienced simple partial seizures and 94% had more than one monthly seizure. Annual healthcare cost of the 72 patients was $190,486 USD, ambulatory healthcare contributing 76% and hospital healthcare with 24%.ConclusionsAnnual mean healthcare cost per PRE patient was $2,646 USD; time of disease evolution and severity of the patient's illness did not affect costs significantly.