Who pays for biliary complications following liver transplant? A business case for quality improvement

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Abstract

We use biliary complication following liver transplantation to quantify the financial implications of surgical complications and make a case for surgical improvement initiatives as a sound financial investment. We reviewed the medical and financial records of all liver transplant patients at the UMHS between July 1, 2002 and June 30, 2005 (N = 256). The association of donor, transplant, recipient and financial data points was assessed using both univariable (Student's t-test, a chi-square and logistic regression) and multivariable (logistic regression) methods. UMHS made a profit of $6822 ± 39 087 on patients without a biliary complication while taking a loss of $5742 ± 58 242 on patients with a biliary complication (p = 0.04). Reimbursement by the payer was $55 362 higher in patients with a biliary complication compared to patients without a biliary complication (p = 0.001). Using multivariable logistic regression analysis, the two independent risk factors for a negative margin included private insurance (compared to public) (OR 1.88, CI 1.10-3.24, p = 0.022) and biliary leak (OR = 2.09, CI 1.06-4.13, p = 0.034). These findings underscore the important impact of surgical complications on transplant finances. Medical centers have a financial interest in transplant surgical quality improvement, but payers have the most to gain with improved surgical outcomes. © 2006 The Authors.

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Englesbe, M. J., Dimick, J., Mathur, A., Ads, Y., Welling, T. H., Pelletier, S. J., … Campbell, D. A. (2006, December). Who pays for biliary complications following liver transplant? A business case for quality improvement. American Journal of Transplantation. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-6143.2006.01575.x

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