This paper describes a method to construct a standardized health care
resource use database. Billing and clinical data were analyzed for 916
patients who received liver transplantations at three medical centers over a
4-year period. Data were checked for completeness by assessing whether each
patient's bill included charges covering specified dates and for specific
services, and for accuracy by comparing a sample of bills to medical records.
Detailed services were matched to a standardized service list from one of the
centers, and a single price list was applied. For certain services, clinical
data were used to estimate service use or, if a match was not possible,
adjusted charges for the services were used. Twenty-three patients were
eliminated from the database because of incomplete resource use data. There
was very good correspondence between bills and medical records, except for
blood products. Direct matches to the standardized service list accounted for
69.3% of services overall; 9.4% of services could not be matched to the
standardized service list and were thus adjusted for center and/or time
period. Clinical data were used to estimate resource use for blood products,
operating room time, and medications; these estimations accounted for 21.3% of
services overall.
A database can be constructed that allows comparison of standardized
resource use and avoids biases due to accounting, geographic, or temporal
factors. Clinical data are essential for the creation of such a database. The
methods described are particularly useful in studies of the cost-effectiveness
of medical technologies.