Plasma for fractionation in a public setting: cost analysis from the perspective of the third-party payer

被引:10
|
作者
Eandi, Mario [1 ]
Gandini, Giorgio [2 ]
Povero, Massimiliano [3 ]
Zaniolo, Orietta [3 ]
Pradelli, Lorenzo [3 ]
Aprili, Giuseppe [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Turin, Dept Pharmacol Sci & Technol, I-10100 Turin, Italy
[2] Integrated Univ Hosp, Dept Transfus Med, Verona, Italy
[3] AdRes, Hlth Econ & Outcome Res, Turin, Italy
关键词
plasma collection; blood transfusion medicine; joint costs; non-remunerated voluntary donors;
D O I
10.2450/2014.0066-14
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background. In Italy. within the legal mandate to pursue national self-sufficiency of plasma-derived medical products, the Regions are starting to organise trade to offset imbalances between need and availability. It is, therefore, necessary to determine the full cost to the Regions of plasma collection and handling. Here we report an analysis of plasma production costs in the Department of Transfusion Medicine of Verona Province, Veneto Region. Materials and methods. Plasma is obtained from voluntary, non-remunerated donors from either whole blood or apheresis donation, and in Verona it is collected, validated and distributed only in Regional Health Service facilities, and then delivered to industry fur processing. The amounts and costs of materials and activities needed to collect, produce, validate and distribute plasma were obtained from the Department of Transfusion Medicine. Attributable overhead expenses were assumed at 15% of direct costs. When plasma was collected as part of whole blood or from multi-component apheresis, joint costs (the costs of the common manufacturing process before the separation) were allocated to the plasma based on the tariff for single components, taken as proxy of the willingness to pay for them. In an alternative scenario plasma recovered from whole blood donations was considered a by-product. Results. The estimated full cost of each valid unit of plasma derived from whole blood, multi-component apheresis. and plasma-apheresis was about (sic) 30, (sic) 73 and (sic) 170, respectively. The estimated total cost per litre of plasma was (sic) 113 for collection from whole blood and (sic) 276 for collection from apheresis. When plasma recovered from whole blood donations was considered a by-product, its cost per litre was estimated to be (sic) 26. Discussion. Our results suggest that the Italian donor-based system, in addition to its ethical and social values, can supply plasma at an affordable cost, comparable (albeit slightly higher) with costs in other recent analyses.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:37 / 45
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Exchanging Third-Party Information with Minimum Transmission Cost
    Wang, Xiumin
    Song, Wentu
    Yuen, Chau
    Li , Jing
    2012 IEEE GLOBAL COMMUNICATIONS CONFERENCE (GLOBECOM), 2012,
  • [32] Second-party and third-party punishment in a public goods experiment
    Zhou, Yan
    Jiao, Peiran
    Zhang, Qilin
    APPLIED ECONOMICS LETTERS, 2017, 24 (01) : 54 - 57
  • [33] Identifiability impedes efficiency maximization: A third-party perspective
    Ritov, Ilana
    Garcia, Stephen M.
    JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL DECISION MAKING, 2023, 36 (04)
  • [34] Maintainability implemented by third-party contractor for public owner
    Her, BM
    Russell, JS
    JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT IN ENGINEERING, 2002, 18 (02) : 95 - 102
  • [35] Budget impact of dostarlimab plus carboplatin-paclitaxel for primary advanced or recurrent endometrial cancer from a third-party US payer perspective
    Lubinga, Solomon J.
    Walder, Lydia
    Burton, Mark
    Shen, Qin
    JOURNAL OF MEDICAL ECONOMICS, 2024, 27 (01) : 1212 - 1221
  • [36] INTRODUCTION OF A LOW-DOSE LEVONORGESTREL INTRAUTERINE CONTRACEPTIVE SYSTEM: A THREE-YEAR BUDGET IMPACT ANALYSIS FROM A THIRD-PARTY PAYER PERSPECTIVE IN THE UNITED STATES
    Trussell, J.
    Ferrufino, C. P.
    Hawes, C.
    Pocoski, J.
    Filonenko, A.
    Kim, R. S.
    McCoy, M. A.
    Law, A. W.
    VALUE IN HEALTH, 2013, 16 (03) : A71 - A72
  • [37] THIRD-PARTY PAYER EXCHANGES: THE CASE FOR AN ENHANCED MODEL OF SERVICE QUALITY FOR NONPROFIT ORGANIZATIONS
    Haley, Lynn
    Grant, E.
    JOURNAL OF MARKETING THEORY AND PRACTICE, 2011, 19 (03) : 277 - 291
  • [38] Third-Party Credit Guarantees and the Cost of Debt: Evidence from Corporate Loans
    Beyhaghi, Mehdi
    REVIEW OF FINANCE, 2022, 26 (02) : 287 - 317
  • [39] Boundary Resources Dependency in Third-Party Development from the Developer's Perspective
    Rafiq, Asma
    Agerfalk, Par J.
    Sjostrom, Jonas
    DESIGN SCIENCE AT THE INTERSECTION OF PHYSICAL AND VIRTUAL DESIGN, 2013, 7939 : 197 - 211
  • [40] KNOWLEDGE, ATTITUDES AND PRACTICES OF MOROCCAN COMMUNITY PHARMACISTS TOWARDS THE THIRD-PARTY PAYER SYSTEM
    Ahid, S.
    Baji, K. E. L.
    VALUE IN HEALTH, 2019, 22 : S608 - S608