Research Article
Economic Impact of Inter-Regional Health Mobility In The Oldest European Administrative Region: A Starting Point For Changing Organizational Model?
Laura Paleari, Chiara Paganino, Paolo
Romairone, Daniela Amicizia, Gabriella
Paoli, Paolo Pronzato, Walter Locatelli,
Filippo Ansaldi, Andrea DeCensi
Correspondence Address :
Dr. Laura Paleari
Division
of Medical Oncology
Galliera Hospital
Mura delle Cappuccine 14
16128 Genoa, Italy
Tel: +39-0105634502
Fax: +39-01057481090
E-mail: laura.paleari@galliera.it
Received on: July 02, 2018, Accepted on: July 13, 2018, Published on: July 20, 2018
Citation: Laura Paleari, Chiara Paganino, Paolo Romairone, et al. (2018). Economic Impact of Inter-Regional Health Mobility In The Oldest European Administrative Region: A Starting Point For Changing Organizational Model?
Copyright: 2018 Laura Paleari, et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits
unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Abstract
Objectives: The aim of this study is to evaluate the inter-regional mobility expenditures, with particular reference to oncology, in Liguria Region.
Study design: A descriptive analysis of inter-regional mobility expenditures from 2008 to 2015 was carried out.
Methods: The analysis involved a detailed assessment of global balance of interregional health mobility by means the DRGs; the flow of specialist outpatient and pharmaceutical was also used.
Results: Since 2008 until 2012 an increase of negative balance of global healthcare expenditure in Liguria Region was observed [34.7
mill (2008) and 62.3
mill (2012)]; subsequently a quite stable trend was recorded between 2012 and 2015 [ranging between 59.8
mill (2013) and 63.2
mill (2014)]. The passive mobility was 15.1% on the total spending for hospital acute care in 2012 and a similar value was detected in 2015 (15.2%). The higher costs for passive mobility were attributable to the surgical DRGs (69.4% in 2012 and 69.8% in 2015) with a double estimate of the expenditure in comparison with medical ones (2012: 99.4
mill vs 43.8
mill, Δ= 55.6
mill; 2015: 96.6 C mill vs 41.9
mill, Δ= 54.7
mill). The highest cost sources in the process of passive mobility are the surgical areas, particularly the surgical hospitalizations for orthopaedic and cardiologic interventions. The spending analysis for oncologic DRG, divided into surgical and medical for passive and active mobility, showed that the surgical DRG determined a negative balance of 3.8
mill in 2012 and 4.3
mill in 2015, while the medical DRG showed a positive balance of 0.5
mill in 2012 and 0.7
mill in 2015.
Conclusions: Our evaluation highlights that the inter-regional mobility for hospital acute care is the most relevant issue for the economic regional balance and reveals an important flow of patients moving from Liguria Region to neighbouring regions. As the
equity of access and distribution of the supply of care remains a priority of Regional Health System, the active mobility in oncologic field could be a marker of quality health planning.
Keywords: Inter-regional health mobility, Passive mobility, Active mobility, Economic impact, Oncology