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Related Experiment Videos

Pediatric otitis media.

D K Julien1, J A Gricar, D G Cave

  • 1Practice Patterns Science, Inc., Earth City, MO 63045, USA.

Managed Care Interface
|May 26, 1999
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Pediatric otitis media treatment involves multiple office visits and prescriptions, with amoxicillin being a common choice. Surgical interventions, like myringotomy tube insertion, are more frequent in severe cases, impacting overall healthcare costs.

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Area of Science:

  • Pediatrics
  • Otolaryngology
  • Health Economics

Background:

  • Otitis media (OM) is a common pediatric condition requiring significant healthcare resources.
  • Understanding treatment patterns and associated costs is crucial for optimizing care delivery.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To analyze the healthcare utilization and prescribing patterns for pediatric otitis media.
  • To identify key cost drivers in the management of otitis media.

Main Methods:

  • Retrospective analysis of healthcare claims data for pediatric patients with otitis media.
  • Examination of office visits, diagnostic tests, procedures, and prescription drug utilization.
  • Categorization of patients based on severity (SOI-1 and SOI-2) to compare treatment approaches.

Main Results:

  • Routine otitis media cases involved an average of 2.1 office visits and 1.53 prescriptions per patient episode of care (PTE).
  • Amoxicillin was the most frequent single antibiotic prescribed (56.4% of single-drug therapies).
  • Surgical procedures, primarily myringotomy with PE-TM tubes, were common in severe cases (SOI-2), occurring in about half of these patients.

Conclusions:

  • Clinical visits and antimicrobial drugs represent the primary cost drivers in pediatric otitis media management.
  • Physician prescribing patterns, especially the use of multiple drug groups, warrant further investigation for potential cost-of-care implications.
  • Treatment strategies, including surgical interventions, differ significantly based on otitis media severity.