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Public Health . Economic burden of public health care and hospitalisation associated with COVID-19 in China

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  • Public Health . Economic burden of public health care and hospitalisation associated with COVID-19 in China


    Public Health


    . 2022 Jan 12;203:65-74.
    doi: 10.1016/j.puhe.2021.12.001. Online ahead of print.
    Economic burden of public health care and hospitalisation associated with COVID-19 in China


    X An 1 , L Xiao 2 , X Yang 3 , X Tang 1 , F Lai 4 , Xiao-Hua Liang 5



    Affiliations

    Abstract

    Objectives: This study aimed to evaluate the socio-economic burden imposed on the Chinese healthcare system during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.
    Study design: A cross-sectional study was used to investigate how COVID-19 impacted health and medical costs in China. Data were derived from a subdivision of the Centers for Disease control and Prevention of China.
    Methods: We prospectively collected information from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the designated hospitals to determine the cost of public health care and hospitalisation due to COVID-19. We estimated the resource use and direct medical costs associated with public health.
    Results: The average costs, per case, for specimen collection and nucleic acid testing (NAT [specifically, polymerase chain reaction {PCR}]) in low-risk populations were $29.49 and $53.44, respectively; however, the average cost of NAT in high-risk populations was $297.94 per capita. The average costs per 1000 population for epidemiological surveys, disinfectant, health education and centralised isolation were $49.54, $247.01, $90.22 and $543.72, respectively. A single hospitalisation for COVID-19 in China cost a median of $2158.06 ($1961.13-$2325.65) in direct medical costs incurred only during hospitalisation, whereas the total costs associated with hospitalisation of patients with COVID-19 were estimated to have reached nearly $373.20 million in China as of 20, May, 2020. The cost of public health care associated with COVID-19 as of 20, May, 2020 ($6.83 billion) was 18.31 times that of hospitalisation.
    Conclusions: This study highlights the magnitude of resources needed to treat patients with COVID-19 and control the COVID-19 pandemic. Public health measures implemented by the Chinese government have been valuable in reducing the infection rate and may be cost-effective ways to control emerging infectious diseases.

    Keywords: COVID-19; Hospitalisation; Public health care; Socio-economic burden; Treatment.

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