Cost-Effectiveness of a Proactive Primary Care Program for Frail Older People: A Cluster-Randomized Controlled Trial

Publication date

2017-12-01

Authors

Bleijenberg, NienkeISNI 0000000397142357
Drubbel, Irene
Neslo, Rabin
Schuurmans, Marieke J.ISNI 0000000389232088
ten Dam, Valerie H.
Numans, Mattijs E.
de Wit, G. ArdineISNI 0000000389177269
de Wit, NJORCID 0000-0002-0273-8290ISNI 000000036993359X

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Document Type

Article

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cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A proactive integrated approach has shown to preserve daily functioning among older people in the community. The aim is to determine the cost-effectiveness of a proactive integrated primary care program. METHODS: Economic evaluation embedded in a single-blind, 3-armed, cluster-randomized controlled trial with 12 months' follow-up in 39 general practices in the Netherlands. General practices were randomized to one of 3 trial arms: (1) an electronic frailty screening instrument using routine medical record data followed by standard general practitioner (GP) care; (2) this screening instrument followed by a nurse-led care program; or (3) usual care. Health resource utilization data were collected using electronic medical records and questionnaires. Associated costs were calculated. A cost-effectiveness analysis from a societal perspective was undertaken. The incremental cost per quality-adjusted life-year was calculated comparing proactive screening arm with usual care, and screening plus nurse-led care arm with usual care, as well as the screening arm with screening plus nurse-led care arm. RESULTS: Out of 7638 potential participants, 3092 (40.5%) older adults participated. Whereas effect differences were minor, the total costs per patient were lower in both intervention groups compared with usual care. The probability of cost-effectiveness at €20,000 per QALY threshold was 87% and 91% for screening plus GP care versus usual care and for screening plus nurse-led care compared to usual care, respectively. For screening plus nurse-led care vs screening plus standard GP care, the probability was 55%. CONCLUSION: A proactive screening intervention has a high probability of being cost-effective compared to usual care. The combined intervention showed less value for money.

Keywords

Cost-effectiveness analysis, cluster-randomized controlled trial, frailty, general practice, older people, Journal Article

Citation

Bleijenberg, N, Drubbel, I, Neslo, R E, Schuurmans, M J, ten Dam, V H, Numans, M E, de Wit, G A & de Wit, N J 2017, 'Cost-Effectiveness of a Proactive Primary Care Program for Frail Older People : A Cluster-Randomized Controlled Trial', Journal of the American Medical Directors Association, vol. 18, no. 12, pp. 1029-1036. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jamda.2017.06.023