Healthcare costs of acute and chronic tonsillar conditions in the pediatric population in the United States
2015
Abstract Objective To determine the prevalence and healthcare costs associated with the diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic tonsillar conditions (ACT) in children. Design Cross-sectional analysis of the 2006, 2008, and 2010 Medical Expenditure Panel Surveys. Methods Pediatric patients (age Results A total of 74.3 million children (mean age 8.55 years, 51% male) were sampled (raw N = 28,873). Of these, 804,229 children (1.1 ± 0.1%) were diagnosed with ACT annually (mean age 7.24 years, 49.1% male); 64.6 ± 2.0% had acute tonsillitis diagnoses and 35.4 ± 2.0% suffered from chronic tonsillitis. Children with ACT incurred an additional 2.3 office visits and 2.1 prescription fills (both p 0.001) annually compared with those without ACT, adjusting for demographic variables and medical comorbidities, but did not have an increase in emergency department visits ( p = 0.123). Children with acute tonsillar diagnoses carried total healthcare expenditures of $1303 ± 390 annually versus $2401 ± 618 for those with chronic tonsillitis ( p = 0.193). ACT was associated with an incremental increase in total healthcare expense of $1685 per child, annually ( p 0.001). Conclusion The diagnosis of ACT confers a significant incremental healthcare utilization and healthcare cost burden on children, parents and the healthcare system. With its prevalence in the United States, pediatric tonsillitis accounts for approximately $1.355 billion in incremental healthcare expense and is a significant healthcare utilization concern. Level of evidence 2C
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