Healthcare Utilization and Spending for Constipation in Children With Versus Without Complex Chronic Conditions

Title

Healthcare Utilization and Spending for Constipation in Children With Versus Without Complex Chronic Conditions

Creator

Stephens JR; Steiner MJ; DeJong N; Rodean J; Hall M; Richardson T; Berry JG

Publisher

Journal Of Pediatric Gastroenterology And Nutrition

Date

2017

Subject

Health Care Costs; Multiple Chronic Conditions; Patient Acceptance of Health Care; adolescent; Ambulatory Care/ economics/utilization; Child; Child Preschool; Chronic disease; Constipation/economics/ therapy; Delivery of Health Care/ economics; Emergency Service Hospital/utilization; Female; Hospitalization/economics; Humans; infant; Male; Medicaid; Prevalence; retrospective studies; United States

Description

OBJECTIVES: The aim of the study was to examine the prevalence of diagnosis and treatment for constipation among children receiving Medicaid and to compare healthcare utilization and spending for constipation among children based on number of complex chronic conditions (CCCs). METHODS: Retrospective cohort study of 4.9 million children ages 1 to 17 years enrolled in Medicaid from 2009 to 2011 in 10 states in the Truven Marketscan Database. Constipation was identified using International Classification of Disease, 9th revision codes for constipation (564.0x), intestinal impaction (560.3x), or encopresis (307.7). Outpatient and inpatient utilization and spending for constipation were assessed. CCC status was identified using validated methodology. RESULTS: A total of 267,188 children (5.4%) were diagnosed with constipation. Total constipation spending was $79.5 million. Outpatient constipation spending was $66.8 million (84.1%) during 406,814 visits, mean spending $120/visit. Among children with constipation, 1363 (0.5%) received inpatient treatment, accounting for $12.2 million (15.4%) of constipation spending, mean spending $7815/hospitalization. Of children hospitalized for constipation, 552 (40.5%) did not have an outpatient visit for constipation before admission. Approximately 6.8% of children in the study had >/=1 CCC; these children accounted for 33.5% of total constipation spending, 70.3% of inpatient constipation spending, and 19.8% of emergency department constipation spending. Constipation prevalence was 11.0% for children with 1 CCC, 16.6% with 2 CCCs, and 27.1% with >/=3 CCCs. CONCLUSIONS: Although the majority of pediatric constipation treatment occurs in the outpatient setting, inpatient care accounts for a sizable percentage of spending. Children with CCCs have a higher prevalence of constipation and account for a disproportionate amount of constipation healthcare utilization and spending.

Rights

Article information provided for research and reference use only. PedPalASCNET does not hold any rights over the resource listed here. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).

Citation List Month

January 2018 List

Collection

Citation

Stephens JR; Steiner MJ; DeJong N; Rodean J; Hall M; Richardson T; Berry JG, “Healthcare Utilization and Spending for Constipation in Children With Versus Without Complex Chronic Conditions,” Pediatric Palliative Care Library, accessed April 26, 2024, https://pedpalascnetlibrary.omeka.net/items/show/11231.