J O U R N A L O F WO U N D C A R E Vo l 2 2 . N o 1 . E W M A D o c u M E N t 2 0 1 3
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Healtheconomics:
Woundmanagement
anddebridement
T
he distinctive feature of an economic
approach to the evaluation of health-
care interventions is that it involves
explicit consideration of both the costs and the
outcomes, or consequences, of an intervention.
When resources are scarce, it is not appropriate
to make choices on the basis of patient outcomes
alone, since maximising benefits for one group
of patients may mean fewer benefits for others.
With a fixed budget, spending money on an
expensive treatment that heals wounds faster
may simply mean that it is possible to treat fewer
patients in total. Economic evaluation takes
account of the benefits as well as the costs of an
intervention, measured in terms of the value of
other opportunities forgone.
During recent years, positive examples have
illustrated the possibilities to reduce both resource
utilisation and costs, alongside important
improvements in health-related quality of life
for affected patients. Successful projects are often
associated with a broader perspective including,
not only the costs of dressings and other material,
but also costs of staff resources, frequency of
dressing changes, total time to healing and
quality of life. Several cases have also focused
on education of physicians and nurses, together
with more effective management of ulcers as
fruitful actions.
From the resource utilisation point of view it is
essential to analyse debridement as an integrated
part of wound management to achieve a specific
end point, such as healing. Currently these
aspects of the various debridement techniques
have not been thoroughly examined.
Thus, this introduction to the health economy
of debridement will not go in to detail regarding
the cost effectiveness of various techniques,
but instead focus on the overall structures of
costs, with a reference to existing literature on
debridement and non-healing wounds.
Health economics and
factors related to healing
of non-healing wounds
In patients with hard-to-heal diabetic foot ulcers
(those with deep foot infections), the dominating
factors related to high cost have been identified
as the number of surgical procedures, length
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