Healthcare costs of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in Denmark - specialist care versus GP care only

BMC Health Serv Res. 2022 Mar 28;22(1):408. doi: 10.1186/s12913-022-07778-w.

Abstract

Background: Many patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are treated in general practice only and have never received specialist care for COPD. They are seldom included in COPD cost studies but may account for a substantial proportion of the total costs.

Objective: To estimate and specify the total healthcare costs of patients who are treated for COPD in Denmark comparing those who have- and have not had specialist care for COPD.

Setting: Denmark, population 5.7 million citizens.

Methods: Via national registers, we specified the total healthcare costs of all + 30-years-old current users of respiratory pharmaceuticals. We identified the patients with COPD and compared those with at least one episode of pulmonary specialist care to those with GP care only.

Results: Among totally 329,428 users of respiratory drugs, we identified 46,084 with specialist-care- and 68,471 with GP-care-only COPD. GP-care-only accounted for 40% of the two populations' total healthcare costs. The age- and gender-adjusted coefficient relating the individual total costs specialist-care versus GP-care-only was 2.19. The individual costs ranged widely and overlapped considerably (p25-75: specialist-care €2,175-€12,625, GP-care-only €1,110-€4,350). Hospital treatment accounted for most of the total cost (specialist-care 78%, GP-care-only 62%; coefficient 2.81), pharmaceuticals (specialist-care 16%, GP-care-only 27%; coefficient 1.28), and primary care costs (specialist-care 6%, GP-care-only 11%; coefficient 1.13). The total costs of primary care pulmonary specialists were negligible.

Conclusion: Healthcare policy makers should consider the substantial volume of patients who are treated for COPD in general practice only and do not appear in specialist statistics.

Keywords: COPD; Cost of illness; Epidemiology; Primary care; Public health.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Denmark
  • General Practice*
  • Health Care Costs
  • Humans
  • Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive* / epidemiology