Analysis of costs for pandemic management in a tertiary-care hospital in Italy: An investment for a more resilient structure

Angelo Baggiani MD12, Silvia Briani MD1, Grazia Luchini MD1, Mauro Giraldi MD1, Jacopo Fernandez MD1, Carla Collecchi MD1, Matteo Filippi MD1, Lucia Trillini MD1, Domenica Mamone MD1, Maria Carola Martino MD1, Antonella Ciucci MD1, Michele Cristofano MD1, Antonella De Vito MD1, Gabriella Pellegrini MD1, Grazia Valori MD1, Guglielmo Arzilli BS2, Daniele Sironi BS2, Tommaso Mariotti BS2, Francesca Papini BS2, Virginia Casigliani BS2, Giuditta Scardina BS2, Giacomo Visi BS2, Beatrice Casini MD12, Andrea Porretta MD12, Michele Totaro BS2, Gaetano Privitera MD12 and Carlo Milli MD1 1The Azienda Ospedaliero Universitaria Pisana, Pisa, Italy and 2Department of Translational Research and the New Technologies in Medicine and Surgery, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy

To the Editor-The tertiary-care teaching hospital of Pisa (Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria Pisana, AOUP) received its first coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patient on March 4. During the outbreak, this hospital setting underwent major reorganization to respond to the situation. Hospital wards and patient management protocols were modified to quickly adapt to the clinical needs of the patients as well as to ensure patient safety and healthcare worker (HCW) protection from infection. 1,2 The execution of this strategy to deal with the epidemic imposed significant costs on our hospital. Currently, many expenditure models have been published, as data concerning national health insurance and losses in terms of investments in the various economic sectors. [3][4][5] We quantified economic costs incurred by the AOUP from March to July 2020 for the management of the COVID-19 pandemic, focusing on the structural costs for the implementation of the present structure and for the realization of a new COVID-19 hospital.
AOUP is organized into 2 main facilities for a total of 1,082 beds. For pandemic management, the Cisanello facility was reorganized and 160 bed places were dedicated to COVID-19 patients in medical wards, 39 beds in intensive care units, and 24 bed for C-PAP therapy. 1 Santa Chiara facility is an old pavilion hospital that has been gradually disused. A building that used to accommodate the old emergency room has been renovated as the city's COVID-19 center.
In the first phase, the emergency was addressed by increasing response to COVID-19 patients. Ordinary wards were progressively closed to dedicate these areas to COVID-19 patients. Therapeutic pathways were reorganized, and COVID-19 cases were stratified into patients requiring low-, medium-, and high-intensity care. Construction of negative pressure chambers in operating theatres and the extension of intensive care wards were carried out.
In the second phase, the objectives were the radical sanitization of the areas dedicated to COVID-19 patients, the reconversion to their original use, and the gradual resumption of outpatient activities by eliminating the waiting lists created and of visits to patients.
The objective of the third phase was to create a hospital for COVID-19 patients in the Santa Chiara facility to prepare for future outbreaks.
For each phase, we analyzed costs directly related to the preparedness and the management of the epidemic (Table 1).
In Healthcare facilities had to quickly adapt; they underwent huge changes to protect HCWs, to manage COVID-19 patients, and to limit the risk of infection for other inpatients. The way health services are delivered has been greatly modified at our institution during the pandemic. 6 Meeting these challenges has entailed significant expenditure in economic terms. Even if many reports on the costs that health systems had to face because of the COVID-19 emergency have already been published, it is difficult to quantify the real expenditure, and the estimates are most likely underrepresented. In Italy, according to the ALTEMS report, 7 the total impact on hospital expenditures has been €1,586,858,655 (US$1,854,400,002).
In our study, the entire process of conversion (the reconversion of Cisanello and requalification of Santa Chiara) cost a total of €13,556,355.43 (US$15,840,470.55). These resources were deployed by making decisions toward significant benefits. Furthermore, we set up adequate infrastructures to meet possible future waves.
The placement of these funds is in accordance with the WHO guidelines, which affirm that expenditures for COVID-19 should lead to longer-term, wider benefits in line with national needs for sustainable capacities. 8 Our hospital has made efforts and incurred costs to adapt in a short time to the emerging crisis. We used this opportunity to increase the hospital's resilience and preparedness. The strategies adopted, with the related costs, have allowed us not only to overcome the acute phase but also to prepare the necessary resources for future crises.