Submitted:
22 June 2026
Posted:
23 June 2026
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Study Design and Setting
2.2. Data Collection and Variables
- Demographic characteristics: age (in years or months for infants) and sex.
- Clinical information: primary diagnosis or reason for transfer as documented at hospital arrival. Diagnoses were subsequently grouped into predefined clinically relevant categories according to the principal presenting condition: respiratory, neurologic, gastrointestinal, trauma, surgical, and other. The “other” category comprised low-frequency presentations that did not fit the major diagnostic groups, including minor dermatologic, ophthalmologic, musculoskeletal, genitourinary, and nonspecific complaints. Because individual subcategories had small sample sizes, they were combined into a single category to preserve analytical stability. Classification was performed by the research team using predefined grouping rules and clinical judgment rather than a formal coding system (e.g., ICD), reflecting real-world documentation practices. The same diagnostic classification scheme was used throughout all descriptive and multivariable analyses.
- Transport characteristics: mode of transport (ground, air, or sea), geographic origin, and estimated transfer cost. Costs included fuel, personnel, and operational expenses obtained from hospital financial records and/or EKAB and therefore represent mode-based service costs rather than patient-level micro-costing. Economic analyses focused primarily on cost concentration and the burden associated with high-cost transport modalities.
- Geographic origin: the broader region from which the child was transferred (Attica/urban, mainland/provincial, or island region). Descriptive analyses used these broad geographic categories, whereas cost analyses additionally incorporated Greek health authority regions to reflect the administrative framework used for transport expenditure recording. For multivariable analyses, geographic origin was collapsed into three categories (Attica, Aegean, and Mainland/Other) to reduce sparse cells and improve model stability.
- Transfer-source origin: the immediate site from which transport was initiated (patient’s home or incident scene, hospital, or health centre), distinguishing prehospital EMS transports from interfacility transfers. Because geographic origin and transfer-source origin represent different constructs (location versus referral pathway), both variables were retained in the analyses.
- Clinical outcomes: ICU admission upon arrival, length of hospital stay, in-hospital mortality, and final disposition (e.g., discharge, ward admission, or transfer to a surgical or subspecialty service).
2.3. Definition of Potentially Avoidable Transfers
2.4. Statistical Analysis
2.5. Ethical Considerations
3. Results
3.1. Demographic Characteristics

3.2. Transfer Origin and Mode of Transport
3.3. Regional and Seasonal Transfer Rates
3.4. Diagnostic Categories and Tertiary Hospital-Level Care
3.5. Potentially Avoidable Transfers
3.6. Distribution and Determinants of Transfer Costs
3.7. Structural Drivers of Transfer Costs
3.8. Cost Concentration Analysis
3.9. Association Between Transfer Type and Tertiary Hospital-Level Care
3.10. Interfacility Transfers
4. Discussion
5. Limitations
6. Strengths
7. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| Geographical Region | Population | Transfers | Rate per 1,000 | p-value (vs Athens) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Athens/ Piraeus | 578,165 | 248 | 0.43 | Reference |
| Islands | 121,785 | 49 | 0.40 | 0.739 |
| South Greece | 79,238 | 52 | 0.66 | 0.0065 |
| North Greece | 453,369 | 8 | 0.02 | <0.001 |
| Central Greece | 397,661 | 66 | 0.17 | <0.001 |
| Diagnosis | Tertiary hospital-level care/admission n/N (%) | ED/short-stay discharge n/N (%) | Tertiary-care utilization rate (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Respiratory | 97/138 (70.3) | 41/138 (29.7) | 70.3 |
| Neurologic | 40/45 (88.9) | 5/45 (11.1) | 88.9 |
| Gastrointestinal | 21/48 (43.8) | 27/48 (56.3) | 43.8 |
| Trauma | 29/65 (44.6) | 36/65 (55.4) | 44.6 |
| Surgical | 27/30 (90.0) | 3/30 (10.0) | 90.0 |
| Other | 10/97 (10.3) | 87/97 (89.7) | 10.3 |
| Total | 224/423 (53.0) | 199/423 (47.0) | 53.0 |
| Mode | Transfers (n) | Total cost (€) | Mean cost (€) | Median cost (€) | % of total budget |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Air ambulance | 41 | 280,015 | 6,829.63 | 7,000.00 | 88.79 |
| Boat ambulance | 10 | 26,015 | 2,601.50 | 3,000.00 | 8.25 |
| Ground ambulance | 372 | 9,340 | 25.11 | 15.00 | 2.96 |
| Total | 423 | 315,370 | 745,56 | 15,00 | 100 |
| Region code (Health authority) | Transfers (n) | Total cost (€) | Mean (€) | Median (€) | % of total budget |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Piraeus-Aegean islands | 127 | 279,430 | 2,200.24 | 15.00 | 88.60 |
| Epirus-Ionian Islands-Peloponnese | 85 | 17,655 | 207.71 | 45.00 | 5.60 |
| Crete | 2 | 14,000 | 7,000.00 | 7,000.00 | 4.44 |
| Attika-Athens | 164 | 2,460 | 15.00 | 15.00 | 0.78 |
| Thessaly-Sterea | 43 | 1,795 | 41.74 | 45.00 | 0.57 |
| Macedonia-Thrace | 2 | 30 | 15.00 | 15.00 | 0.01 |
| Total | 423 | 315,370 | 745.56 | 15.00 | 100 |
| Scenario | Total cost (€) | Air share (%) | Boat share (%) | Ground share (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline (observed) | 315,370 | 88.79 | 8.25 | 2.96 |
| All unit costs +20% | 378,444 | 88.79 | 8.25 | 2.96 |
| All unit costs -20% | 252,296 | 88.79 | 8.25 | 2.96 |
| Air/sea +20% only | 376,576 | 89.23 | 8.29 | 2.48 |
| Air/sea −20% only | 254,164 | 88.13 | 8.19 | 3.68 |
| Ground unit cost doubled (≈€30 avg) | 324,710 | 86.23 | 8.01 | 5.76 |
| Ground overridden to €60 each | 328,350 | 85.26 | 7.92 | 6.81 |
| Transfer type | Tertiary hospital-level care/admission | ED/short-stay discharge | OR | 95% CI | p |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prehospital EMS | 81/216 (37.5%) | 135/216 (62.5%) | 1.00 reference | — | — |
| Interfacility transfer | 143/207 (69.1%) | 64/207 (30.9%) | 3.72 | 2.49–5.57 | <0.001 |
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