The Cost-Effectiveness, Cost-Utility, and Ecological Impact of a New Immediate Sequential Bilateral Cataract Surgery Method

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© 2025 Yang BM. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Purpose : To determine the cost-effectiveness, cost-utility, and ecological impact of a new immediate sequential bilateral cataract surgery (ISBCS) method, in which both eyes are operated on in one procedure using the same protective clothing and coverings. Setting : A retrospective comparison was conducted in western Finland, involving operations performed in one public hospital and two private hospitals, as well as a university hospital. Design : Retrospective cohort study. Methods : Data from 6698 patients (11453 eyes) were examined. Three cohorts were analysed. The new ISBCS method cohort (2328 patients/4656 eyes) performed by one senior surgeon in both public and private hospitals, a traditional ISBCS control group (2427 patients/4854 eyes) in a university hospital, and a unilateral cataract control group (1943 patients/1943 eyes) by the same senior surgeon in a public hospital. Main outcomes measured included material costs, personnel costs, quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) costs, and carbon footprint. Results : Compared with traditional ISBCS and unilateral control groups, the new ISBCS method resulted in a 24.6% reduction in total costs per eye and a 28.6% reduction in personnel costs per eye. The new ISBCS method lowered QALY-cost by 24.6% and was also estimated to reduce the carbon footprint per eye by 29.2% compared to traditional ISBCS. Conclusions : This new method of performing ISBCS can potentially improve surgical productivity, reduce per-eye costs, lower QALY-cost, and significantly decrease carbon footprint, without compromising patient safety. It could thus serve as a preferred protocol for ISBCS in the future.

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Journal of Ophthalmic Surgery|8

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