The purpose of this study was to examine the cost effectiveness of critical care in a middle income country with limited resources. The main study hypothesis was that critical care is cost effective in low resources setting.
The investigators objective was to calculate the cost effectiveness of treatment of critically ill patients in a medical ICU of a middle income country with limited access to ICU resources. Methods: Consecutive critically ill medical patients treated in a recently established medical ICU in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, were prospectively recorded and a subsequent cost utility analysis of intensive care in comparison to hospital ward treatment from the perspective of health care system was performed. Incremental cost effectiveness was calculated using estimates of ICU versus non-ICU treatment effectiveness based on a formal systematic review of published studies. Decision analytic modeling was used to compare treatment alternatives. Sensitivity analyses of the key model parameters were performed.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
148
ventilator support for the patients presenting with acute respiratory failure
paralysis of the skeletal muscles in order to optimize mechanical ventilation, especially during ARDS
the procedures used to treat acute kidney injury
survival
mortality was recorded one year after hospital discharge and subtracted from the value od 100% in order to get one year survival
Time frame: one year after hospital release
mortality
Time frame: 30 days and 60 days after critical illness onset and one year after hospital release
health related quality of life (HRQOL)
HRQOL was assessed using EQ5D-3L questionnaire
Time frame: one year after hospital release
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Procedure used for ventilation support in patients with congestive heart failure, pulmonary edema, COPD and some other conditions.