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Long-term catheter management in the community: a population-based analysis of user characteristics, service utilisation and costs in England

Long-term catheter management in the community: a population-based analysis of user characteristics, service utilisation and costs in England
Long-term catheter management in the community: a population-based analysis of user characteristics, service utilisation and costs in England
Background: long-term urinary catheters are problematic and burdensome for patients, carers and health services. Nursing practice to improve the management of long-term urinary catheters has been held back by a lack of evidence to support policy and practice. Little is known about who uses a catheter long term and the resources and costs needed for their management. Understanding these costs will help to target innovations to improve care. There have been no substantial innovations to urinary catheters or their management recently and no publications to characterise users and costs.

Aim: to describe long-term catheter users and explore catheter-related service use and costs in England.

Methods: descriptive information on the characteristics of catheter users and their use of services was obtained from: General Practice records (n = 607), district nursing records (n = 303), questionnaires to patients (n = 333) and triangulated, 2009–2012. Annual service costs (British pounds 2011) were computed.

Findings: most catheter users (59.6%) were men, nearly three-quarters (71.2%) were over 70 years and 60.8% used a urethral catheter. Women tended to be younger than men and more likely to use a suprapubic catheter. The services used most frequently over 12 months were general practitioner (by 63.1%) and out of hours services (43.0%); 15.5% accessed Accident and Emergency services for urgent catheter-related care. Hospital use accounted for nearly half (48.9%) of total health service costs (mainly due to inpatient stays by 13.6% of participants); catheter supplies/medications were next most costly (25.7%). Half of all costs were accounted for by 14.2% of users. The median annual cost of services used was £6.38, IQR: £344–£1324; district nursing services added approximately a further £200 per annum.

Conclusions: finding better ways to reduce catheter problems (e.g. blockage, infection) that cause unplanned visits, urgent or hospital care should be a priority to improve quality of life for long-term catheter users and reduce health service expenditure.
1463-4236
Gage, Heather
19bfbcaf-5cec-4ca4-8830-53216e56a460
Williams, Peter
ca857c28-4291-4eda-a6ad-c30af0f8c092
Avery, Miriam
ad9dda5f-a7da-42dc-8cb7-83a8ca37e6ef
Murphy, Catherine
b7f2dd56-3a8a-412a-9f6a-bf468ce7f749
Fader, Mandy
c318f942-2ddb-462a-9183-8b678faf7277
Gage, Heather
19bfbcaf-5cec-4ca4-8830-53216e56a460
Williams, Peter
ca857c28-4291-4eda-a6ad-c30af0f8c092
Avery, Miriam
ad9dda5f-a7da-42dc-8cb7-83a8ca37e6ef
Murphy, Catherine
b7f2dd56-3a8a-412a-9f6a-bf468ce7f749
Fader, Mandy
c318f942-2ddb-462a-9183-8b678faf7277

Gage, Heather, Williams, Peter, Avery, Miriam, Murphy, Catherine and Fader, Mandy (2024) Long-term catheter management in the community: a population-based analysis of user characteristics, service utilisation and costs in England. Primary Health Care Research & Development, 25, [e13]. (doi:10.1017/S1463423624000021).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: long-term urinary catheters are problematic and burdensome for patients, carers and health services. Nursing practice to improve the management of long-term urinary catheters has been held back by a lack of evidence to support policy and practice. Little is known about who uses a catheter long term and the resources and costs needed for their management. Understanding these costs will help to target innovations to improve care. There have been no substantial innovations to urinary catheters or their management recently and no publications to characterise users and costs.

Aim: to describe long-term catheter users and explore catheter-related service use and costs in England.

Methods: descriptive information on the characteristics of catheter users and their use of services was obtained from: General Practice records (n = 607), district nursing records (n = 303), questionnaires to patients (n = 333) and triangulated, 2009–2012. Annual service costs (British pounds 2011) were computed.

Findings: most catheter users (59.6%) were men, nearly three-quarters (71.2%) were over 70 years and 60.8% used a urethral catheter. Women tended to be younger than men and more likely to use a suprapubic catheter. The services used most frequently over 12 months were general practitioner (by 63.1%) and out of hours services (43.0%); 15.5% accessed Accident and Emergency services for urgent catheter-related care. Hospital use accounted for nearly half (48.9%) of total health service costs (mainly due to inpatient stays by 13.6% of participants); catheter supplies/medications were next most costly (25.7%). Half of all costs were accounted for by 14.2% of users. The median annual cost of services used was £6.38, IQR: £344–£1324; district nursing services added approximately a further £200 per annum.

Conclusions: finding better ways to reduce catheter problems (e.g. blockage, infection) that cause unplanned visits, urgent or hospital care should be a priority to improve quality of life for long-term catheter users and reduce health service expenditure.

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Accepted/In Press date: 30 December 2023
Published date: 7 March 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 498747
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/498747
ISSN: 1463-4236
PURE UUID: c9190678-f1c9-4a14-b533-cb45ee5970ea
ORCID for Catherine Murphy: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1244-5106

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Date deposited: 26 Feb 2025 17:39
Last modified: 27 Feb 2025 02:46

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Contributors

Author: Heather Gage
Author: Peter Williams
Author: Miriam Avery
Author: Mandy Fader

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