Inpatient care for skin diseases in Germany: multi-source analysis on the current and future health care needs

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Inpatient care for skin diseases in Germany: multi-source analysis on the current and future health care needs. / Augustin, Matthias; Girbig, Gefion; Kis, Anne; Bechara, Falk G; Hertl, Michael; Hischke, Sandra; Kaufmann, Roland; Löffler, Harald; Müller, Cornelia S L; Simon, Jan-Christoph; Strömer, Klaus; Welzel, Julia; Wetzig, Tino; Elsner, Peter; Augustin, Jobst; Löser, Christoph; Biedermann, Tilo.

in: J DTSCH DERMATOL GES, Jahrgang 19, Nr. S5, 10.2021, S. 25-53.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Augustin, M, Girbig, G, Kis, A, Bechara, FG, Hertl, M, Hischke, S, Kaufmann, R, Löffler, H, Müller, CSL, Simon, J-C, Strömer, K, Welzel, J, Wetzig, T, Elsner, P, Augustin, J, Löser, C & Biedermann, T 2021, 'Inpatient care for skin diseases in Germany: multi-source analysis on the current and future health care needs', J DTSCH DERMATOL GES, Jg. 19, Nr. S5, S. 25-53. https://doi.org/10.1111/ddg.14620

APA

Augustin, M., Girbig, G., Kis, A., Bechara, F. G., Hertl, M., Hischke, S., Kaufmann, R., Löffler, H., Müller, C. S. L., Simon, J-C., Strömer, K., Welzel, J., Wetzig, T., Elsner, P., Augustin, J., Löser, C., & Biedermann, T. (2021). Inpatient care for skin diseases in Germany: multi-source analysis on the current and future health care needs. J DTSCH DERMATOL GES, 19(S5), 25-53. https://doi.org/10.1111/ddg.14620

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{9c6d2a523ea54aef816f27a61ff11adc,
title = "Inpatient care for skin diseases in Germany: multi-source analysis on the current and future health care needs",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: In Germany, skin diseases are mainly treated in the 115 dermatological hospitals.METHODS: Health care and health economic analysis of dermatological inpatient care and prediction of future care needs based on primary and secondary data.RESULTS: Outpatient and inpatient care for dermatologic treatment indications is predominantly provided by dermatology specialists. Inpatient treatment was provided for 833,491 cases in 2018, corresponding to 4.21 % of all inpatient cases (19,808,687). Most common treatment cases were: epithelial skin cancer (total 87,386, of which dermatology clinics 52,608), followed by melanoma (23,917/17,774), psoriasis (19,291/13,352), erysipelas (73,337/11,260), other dermatitis (12,671/10,842), atopic dermatitis (AD) (11,421/9,734), and herpes zoster (26,249/9,652). With an average length of stay of 5.69 days, dermatology hospitals were in the bottom third. The proportion of inpatient indications cared for in dermatology hospitals was highest for prurigo (95.2 %), pemphigus (94.9 %), parapsoriasis (94.6 %), pemphigoid (90.3 %), eczema other than AD (85.6 %), and AD (85.2 %). While the total number of inpatient treatment cases in Germany has increased by an average of 17.5 % between 2000 and 2018, this is the case for 26.6 % of skin diseases and over 150 % for individual ones. The projection of current to future inpatient care suggests a continued high demand for inpatient care by dermatology hospitals.CONCLUSION: Inpatient dermatological care will continue to be an indispensable component of qualified, socially necessary care in Germany.",
keywords = "Delivery of Health Care, Dermatology, Germany/epidemiology, Humans, Inpatients, Prurigo, Skin Diseases/epidemiology",
author = "Matthias Augustin and Gefion Girbig and Anne Kis and Bechara, {Falk G} and Michael Hertl and Sandra Hischke and Roland Kaufmann and Harald L{\"o}ffler and M{\"u}ller, {Cornelia S L} and Jan-Christoph Simon and Klaus Str{\"o}mer and Julia Welzel and Tino Wetzig and Peter Elsner and Jobst Augustin and Christoph L{\"o}ser and Tilo Biedermann",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2021 The Authors | {\textcopyright} Deutsche Dermatologische Gesellschaft (DDG). Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.",
year = "2021",
month = oct,
doi = "10.1111/ddg.14620",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
pages = "25--53",
journal = "J DTSCH DERMATOL GES",
issn = "1610-0379",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "S5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Inpatient care for skin diseases in Germany: multi-source analysis on the current and future health care needs

AU - Augustin, Matthias

AU - Girbig, Gefion

AU - Kis, Anne

AU - Bechara, Falk G

AU - Hertl, Michael

AU - Hischke, Sandra

AU - Kaufmann, Roland

AU - Löffler, Harald

AU - Müller, Cornelia S L

AU - Simon, Jan-Christoph

AU - Strömer, Klaus

AU - Welzel, Julia

AU - Wetzig, Tino

AU - Elsner, Peter

AU - Augustin, Jobst

AU - Löser, Christoph

AU - Biedermann, Tilo

N1 - © 2021 The Authors | © Deutsche Dermatologische Gesellschaft (DDG). Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

PY - 2021/10

Y1 - 2021/10

N2 - BACKGROUND: In Germany, skin diseases are mainly treated in the 115 dermatological hospitals.METHODS: Health care and health economic analysis of dermatological inpatient care and prediction of future care needs based on primary and secondary data.RESULTS: Outpatient and inpatient care for dermatologic treatment indications is predominantly provided by dermatology specialists. Inpatient treatment was provided for 833,491 cases in 2018, corresponding to 4.21 % of all inpatient cases (19,808,687). Most common treatment cases were: epithelial skin cancer (total 87,386, of which dermatology clinics 52,608), followed by melanoma (23,917/17,774), psoriasis (19,291/13,352), erysipelas (73,337/11,260), other dermatitis (12,671/10,842), atopic dermatitis (AD) (11,421/9,734), and herpes zoster (26,249/9,652). With an average length of stay of 5.69 days, dermatology hospitals were in the bottom third. The proportion of inpatient indications cared for in dermatology hospitals was highest for prurigo (95.2 %), pemphigus (94.9 %), parapsoriasis (94.6 %), pemphigoid (90.3 %), eczema other than AD (85.6 %), and AD (85.2 %). While the total number of inpatient treatment cases in Germany has increased by an average of 17.5 % between 2000 and 2018, this is the case for 26.6 % of skin diseases and over 150 % for individual ones. The projection of current to future inpatient care suggests a continued high demand for inpatient care by dermatology hospitals.CONCLUSION: Inpatient dermatological care will continue to be an indispensable component of qualified, socially necessary care in Germany.

AB - BACKGROUND: In Germany, skin diseases are mainly treated in the 115 dermatological hospitals.METHODS: Health care and health economic analysis of dermatological inpatient care and prediction of future care needs based on primary and secondary data.RESULTS: Outpatient and inpatient care for dermatologic treatment indications is predominantly provided by dermatology specialists. Inpatient treatment was provided for 833,491 cases in 2018, corresponding to 4.21 % of all inpatient cases (19,808,687). Most common treatment cases were: epithelial skin cancer (total 87,386, of which dermatology clinics 52,608), followed by melanoma (23,917/17,774), psoriasis (19,291/13,352), erysipelas (73,337/11,260), other dermatitis (12,671/10,842), atopic dermatitis (AD) (11,421/9,734), and herpes zoster (26,249/9,652). With an average length of stay of 5.69 days, dermatology hospitals were in the bottom third. The proportion of inpatient indications cared for in dermatology hospitals was highest for prurigo (95.2 %), pemphigus (94.9 %), parapsoriasis (94.6 %), pemphigoid (90.3 %), eczema other than AD (85.6 %), and AD (85.2 %). While the total number of inpatient treatment cases in Germany has increased by an average of 17.5 % between 2000 and 2018, this is the case for 26.6 % of skin diseases and over 150 % for individual ones. The projection of current to future inpatient care suggests a continued high demand for inpatient care by dermatology hospitals.CONCLUSION: Inpatient dermatological care will continue to be an indispensable component of qualified, socially necessary care in Germany.

KW - Delivery of Health Care

KW - Dermatology

KW - Germany/epidemiology

KW - Humans

KW - Inpatients

KW - Prurigo

KW - Skin Diseases/epidemiology

U2 - 10.1111/ddg.14620

DO - 10.1111/ddg.14620

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 34662491

VL - 19

SP - 25

EP - 53

JO - J DTSCH DERMATOL GES

JF - J DTSCH DERMATOL GES

SN - 1610-0379

IS - S5

ER -