4.4 Article

Decomposition of outpatient health care spending by disease-a novel approach using insurance claims data

Journal

BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12913-021-07262-x

Keywords

Health care costs; Cost-of-illness; Outpatient care; Switzerland; Spending decomposition

Funding

  1. swissuniversities (Swiss Learning Health System)
  2. ZHAW Zurich University of Applied Sciences

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Decomposing outpatient spending by disease, age, sex, and service type can provide insights into the drivers of healthcare spending. Using health insurance claims data, diseases can be identified through diagnostic clues, enabling detailed analysis for informing health policies in Switzerland.
Background Decomposing health care spending by disease, type of care, age, and sex can lead to a better understanding of the drivers of health care spending. But the lack of diagnostic coding in outpatient care often precludes a decomposition by disease. Yet, health insurance claims data hold a variety of diagnostic clues that may be used to identify diseases. Methods In this study, we decompose total outpatient care spending in Switzerland by age, sex, service type, and 42 exhaustive and mutually exclusive diseases according to the Global Burden of Disease classification. Using data of a large health insurance provider, we identify diseases based on diagnostic clues. These clues include type of medication, inpatient treatment, physician specialization, and disease specific outpatient treatments and examinations. We determine disease-specific spending by direct (clues-based) and indirect (regression-based) spending assignment. Results Our results suggest a high precision of disease identification for many diseases. Overall, 81% of outpatient spending can be assigned to diseases, mostly based on indirect assignment using regression. Outpatient spending is highest for musculoskeletal disorders (19.2%), followed by mental and substance use disorders (12.0%), sense organ diseases (8.7%) and cardiovascular diseases (8.6%). Neoplasms account for 7.3% of outpatient spending. Conclusions Our study shows the potential of health insurance claims data in identifying diseases when no diagnostic coding is available. These disease-specific spending estimates may inform Swiss health policies in cost containment and priority setting.

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