The economic impact of mental healthcare consumption before and after stroke in a cohort of stroke patients in the Netherlands:a record linkage study

BACKGROUND: Post-stroke healthcare consumption is strongly associated with a mental health diagnosis. This study aimed to identify stroke patients who utilised mental healthcare facilities, explored their mental healthcare consumption pre-stroke and post-stroke, and examined possible predictors of costs incurred by mental healthcare consumption post-stroke. METHODS: Three databases were integrated, namely the Maastricht University Medical Centre (MUMC) Medical Administration, the Stroke Registry from the Department of Neurology at MUMC, and the Psychiatric Case Registry South-Limburg. Patients... Mehr ...

Verfasser: van Eeden, M
van Mastrigt, G A P G
Evers, S M A A
van Raak, E P M
Driessen, G A M
van Heugten, C M
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2016
Reihe/Periodikum: van Eeden , M , van Mastrigt , G A P G , Evers , S M A A , van Raak , E P M , Driessen , G A M & van Heugten , C M 2016 , ' The economic impact of mental healthcare consumption before and after stroke in a cohort of stroke patients in the Netherlands : a record linkage study ' , BMC Health Services Research , vol. 16 , no. 1 , 688 . https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-016-1915-3
Schlagwörter: Stroke / Healthcare consumption / Economic impact of stroke / Record linkage study / ACUTE ISCHEMIC-STROKE / COSTS / DEPRESSION / MULTICENTER / SYMPTOMS / SCALE
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26821078
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://cris.maastrichtuniversity.nl/en/publications/1f8a91b1-b3a2-4d07-9ec3-6cd5fda49ed8

BACKGROUND: Post-stroke healthcare consumption is strongly associated with a mental health diagnosis. This study aimed to identify stroke patients who utilised mental healthcare facilities, explored their mental healthcare consumption pre-stroke and post-stroke, and examined possible predictors of costs incurred by mental healthcare consumption post-stroke. METHODS: Three databases were integrated, namely the Maastricht University Medical Centre (MUMC) Medical Administration, the Stroke Registry from the Department of Neurology at MUMC, and the Psychiatric Case Registry South-Limburg. Patients from the MUMC who suffered their first-ever stroke between January 1 2000 and December 31 2004 were included and their records were analysed for mental healthcare consumption from 5 years preceding to 5 years following their stroke (1995-2009). Regression analysis was conducted to identify possible predictors of mental healthcare consumption costs. RESULTS: A total of 1385 patients were included and 357 (25.8%) received services from a mental healthcare facility during the 10-year reference period around their stroke. The costs of mental healthcare usage increased over time and peaked 1 year post-stroke (€7057; 22% of total mental healthcare costs). The number of hospitalisation days and mental healthcare consumption pre-stroke were significant predictors of mental healthcare costs. Explained variances of these models (costs during the 5 years post-stroke: R (2) = 15.5%, costs across a 10 year reference period: R (2) = 4.6%,) were low. CONCLUSION: Stroke patients have a significant level of mental healthcare comorbidity leading to relatively high mental healthcare costs. There is a relationship between stroke and mental healthcare consumption costs, but results concerning the underlying factors responsible for these costs are inconclusive.