Litcius/Paper detail

Estimates of healthcare spending for preterm and low-birthweight infants in a commercially insured population: 2008–2016

Andrew L. Beam, Inbar Fried, Nathan Palmer, Denis Agniel, Gabriel A. Brat, Kathe Fox, Isaac S. Kohane, Anna D. Sinaiko, John A. F. Zupancic, Joanne Armstrong

2020Journal of Perinatology185 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The growth in healthcare spending is an important topic in the United States, and preterm and low-birthweight infants have some of the highest healthcare expenditures of any patient population. We performed a retrospective cohort study of spending in this population using a large, national claims database of commercially insured individuals. A total of 763,566 infants with insurance coverage through Aetna, Inc. for the first 6 months of post-natal life were included, and received approximately $8.4 billion (2016 USD) in healthcare services. Infants with billing codes indicating preterm status (<37 weeks, n = 50,511) incurred medical expenditures of $76,153 on average, while low-birthweight status (<2500 g) was associated with average spending of $114,437. Infants born at 24 weeks gestation (n = 418) had the highest per infant average expenditures of $603,778. Understanding the drivers of variation in costs within gestational age and birthweight bands is an important target for future studies.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineGestational agePopulationPediatricsRetrospective cohort studyHealth careGestationCohortDemographyEnvironmental healthPregnancyBiologyEconomic growthSociologyInternal medicineEconomicsGeneticsHealthcare cost, quality, practicesHealthcare Policy and ManagementChild and Adolescent Health