Injuries and their related household costs in a tertiary hospital in Ghana
Date
2020
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Abstract
Introduction: Injuries remain a leading cause of death in many developing countries, accounting for more deaths
than HIV, tuberculosis, and malaria combined. This study set out to determine the associated patient costs of
reported injury cases at the Accident and Emergency Department of the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital (KBTH) in
Accra, Ghana.
Method: A cross-sectional retrospective Cost-of-Illness study of 301 sampled patients was undertaken, following
a review of injured patients' records from January–December 2016. Direct cost, (consisting of consultation,
surgery, medicines, transportation, property damage, food and consumables) was estimated. Indirect cost was
calculated using the Human capital approach. Intangible cost was assessed using Likert scale analysis. The
overall household cost, average cost of various injuries and intangible costs were determined.
Results: The total annual household cost of injuries to patients who attended KBTH was US$11,327,461.96, of
which 82% was the direct cost. The average household cost of injuries was US$ 1276.15. All injuries recorded
some level of high intangible cost but was exceptional for burns.
Conclusion: Injured patients incur high direct treatment cost in all aetiology, with generally high intangible cost
as well. It is therefore imperative that injury prevention strategies be prioritized in national health policies, while
broader discussions continue on sustainable health financing of injury management.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Injuries, Indirect cost, Intangible cost