Economic cost of home-telemonitoring care for BiPAP-assisted ALS individuals.
J Pedro Lopes de AlmeidaAnabela PintoSusana PintoBenjamim OhanaMamede de CarvalhoPublished in: Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis : official publication of the World Federation of Neurology Research Group on Motor Neuron Diseases (2012)
Our objective was to measure direct (hospital and NHS) and indirect (patient/caregiver) costs of following up in-home compliance to non-invasive ventilation via wireless modem. We constructed a prospective controlled trial of 40 consecutive ALS home-ventilated patients, randomly assigned according to their residence area to G1 (nearby hospital, office-based follow-up) and G2 (outside hospital area, telemetry device-based follow-up). Total NHS direct cost encompassed costs related to outpatients' visits (office and emergency room) and hospitalizations. Hospital direct costs included transportation to/from hospital, office visit per hour cost and equipment maintenance. Non-medical costs considered days of wages lost due to absenteeism. G1 included 20 patients aged 60 ± 10 years and G2 included 19 patients aged 62 ± 13 years. Results showed that no differences were found regarding clinical/demographic characteristics at admission. NHS costs showed a 55% reduction in average total costs with a statistically significant decrease of 81% in annual costs per patient in G2. Hospital costs were found to be significantly higher in G2 with regard to total costs (64% average increase) but not annual costs (7%). No statistical difference was found with regard to expenses from absenteeism. In conclusion, at the cost of an initial financial constraint to the hospital per year (non-significant), telemonitoring is cost-effective, representing major cost savings to the NHS in the order of 700 euros/patient/year.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- acute care
- patient safety
- emergency department
- adverse drug
- case report
- randomized controlled trial
- prognostic factors
- public health
- palliative care
- intensive care unit
- patient reported outcomes
- wastewater treatment
- young adults
- quality improvement
- chronic pain
- emergency medical
- affordable care act