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Standardized Management of Sickle Cell Disease Patients and the Effects on Care Utilization and Costs.

Dylan H RossAmy W WozniakTalar MarkossianGail KellbergSadia K GaziKevin Smith
Published in: American journal of medical quality : the official journal of the American College of Medical Quality (2024)
An individualized management program for patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) was created to reduce health care utilization and cost. The program was implemented to standardize the management of patients with SCD. SCD encounters from January 2010 to December 2020 were reviewed for analysis. Preintervention utilization of inpatient, emergency room, and outpatient settings was compared to postintervention. There were 7114 encounters analyzed. Outpatient encounters increased from 36.5% to 70.9%; inpatient encounters decreased from 38.6% to 20.3%; and emergency department visits decreased from 20.3% to 8.8%. The number of high inpatient utilizers decreased 8.4% and the number of individuals who received any emergency care decreased 11.9%. When comparing average charges per time period, the median charge per encounter decreased by $1838 postintervention compared to preintervention. This newly implemented SCD program demonstrated success through shifting the care of the SCD patient to the outpatient setting rather than the emergency department or inpatient hospitalizations.
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