10 Statistics on Pediatric Cancer Hospitalizations in 2009

Here are 10 statistics on pediatric cancer hospitalizations in 2009, according to the latest statistical brief issued by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

Prevalence
•    There were 94,600 cancer-related hospitalizations among children.
•    Of these, 21,300 stays identified cancer as the principal diagnosis.
•    The in-hospital death rate during stays principally for cancer was 3.0 percent — approximately 10 times higher than for all other pediatric hospital stays.

Patient characteristics
•    54.5 percent of cancer-related hospitals stays were for boys; 45.5 percent were for girls.
•    The average age of children with cancer-related hospital stays was 8.1 years old.
•    Nearly 92 percent of cases were covered by Medicaid or private insurance.

Healthcare costs
•    On average, pediatric hospitalizations principally for cancer were 8 days longer and cost almost five times as much as hospitalizations for other pediatric conditions.
•    The most expensive pediatric cancer hospitalizations were for leukemias ($55,700 mean cost per stay) and non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma ($46,900), largely because hospitalizations for these two cancers had the longest average lengths of stay.
•    From 2000 to 2009, the mean cost per stay for pediatric cancer hospitalizations rose 36 percent.
•    Pediatric stays principally for cancer cost nearly one billion dollars, accounting for over 5 percent of pediatric non-newborn inpatient hospital costs.

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