Predictors of Treatment Cost
Cross-source consensus on Predictors of Treatment Cost from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Comparisons
Evidence quality
Other
Highlighted claims
- Longer diabetes duration, insulin use, and older age were significant predictors of higher treatment cost. — Diabetes-related treatment costs and catastrophic health expenditure at a tertiary care hospital in Rajshahi, Bangladesh: a cross-sectional study
- Patients with diabetes for more than 10 years had significantly higher costs than patients diagnosed for less than 5 years. — Diabetes-related treatment costs and catastrophic health expenditure at a tertiary care hospital in Rajshahi, Bangladesh: a cross-sectional study
- Not taking insulin was associated with lower treatment costs than taking insulin. — Diabetes-related treatment costs and catastrophic health expenditure at a tertiary care hospital in Rajshahi, Bangladesh: a cross-sectional study
- Patients aged 35-55 years spent significantly less than patients aged 56 years or older. — Diabetes-related treatment costs and catastrophic health expenditure at a tertiary care hospital in Rajshahi, Bangladesh: a cross-sectional study
- BMI, education, and occupation were not significant predictors of treatment cost in the linear regression model. — Diabetes-related treatment costs and catastrophic health expenditure at a tertiary care hospital in Rajshahi, Bangladesh: a cross-sectional study