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Relaxation Response and Resiliency Training and Its Effect on Healthcare Resource Utilization

BACKGROUND: Poor psychological and physical resilience in response to stress drives a great deal of health care utilization. Mind-body interventions can reduce stress and build resiliency. The rationale for this study is therefore to estimate the effect of mind-body interventions on healthcare utili...

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Autores principales: Stahl, James E., Dossett, Michelle L., LaJoie, A. Scott, Denninger, John W., Mehta, Darshan H., Goldman, Roberta, Fricchione, Gregory L., Benson, Herbert
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4603901/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26461184
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0140212
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author Stahl, James E.
Dossett, Michelle L.
LaJoie, A. Scott
Denninger, John W.
Mehta, Darshan H.
Goldman, Roberta
Fricchione, Gregory L.
Benson, Herbert
author_facet Stahl, James E.
Dossett, Michelle L.
LaJoie, A. Scott
Denninger, John W.
Mehta, Darshan H.
Goldman, Roberta
Fricchione, Gregory L.
Benson, Herbert
author_sort Stahl, James E.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Poor psychological and physical resilience in response to stress drives a great deal of health care utilization. Mind-body interventions can reduce stress and build resiliency. The rationale for this study is therefore to estimate the effect of mind-body interventions on healthcare utilization. OBJECTIVE: Estimate the effect of mind body training, specifically, the Relaxation Response Resiliency Program (3RP) on healthcare utilization. DESIGN: Retrospective controlled cohort observational study. Setting: Major US Academic Health Network. Sample: All patients receiving 3RP at the MGH Benson-Henry Institute from 1/12/2006 to 7/1/2014 (n = 4452), controls (n = 13149) followed for a median of 4.2 years (.85–8.4 yrs). Measurements: Utilization as measured by billable encounters/year (be/yr) stratified by encounter type: clinical, imaging, laboratory and procedural, by class of chief complaint: e.g., Cardiovascular, and by site of care delivery, e.g., Emergency Department. Subgroup analysis by propensity score matched pre-intervention utilization rate. RESULTS: At one year, total utilization for the intervention group decreased by 43% [53.5 to 30.5 be/yr] (p <0.0001). Clinical encounters decreased by 41.9% [40 to 23.2 be/yr], imaging by 50.3% [11.5 to 5.7 be/yr], lab encounters by 43.5% [9.8 to 5.6], and procedures by 21.4% [2.2 to 1.7 be/yr], all p < 0.01. The intervention group’s Emergency department (ED) visits decreased from 3.6 to 1.7/year (p<0.0001) and Hospital and Urgent care visits converged with the controls. Subgroup analysis (identically matched initial utilization rates—Intervention group: high utilizing controls) showed the intervention group significantly reduced utilization relative to the control group by: 18.3% across all functional categories, 24.7% across all site categories and 25.3% across all clinical categories. CONCLUSION: Mind body interventions such as 3RP have the potential to substantially reduce healthcare utilization at relatively low cost and thus can serve as key components in any population health and health care delivery system.
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spelling pubmed-46039012015-10-20 Relaxation Response and Resiliency Training and Its Effect on Healthcare Resource Utilization Stahl, James E. Dossett, Michelle L. LaJoie, A. Scott Denninger, John W. Mehta, Darshan H. Goldman, Roberta Fricchione, Gregory L. Benson, Herbert PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Poor psychological and physical resilience in response to stress drives a great deal of health care utilization. Mind-body interventions can reduce stress and build resiliency. The rationale for this study is therefore to estimate the effect of mind-body interventions on healthcare utilization. OBJECTIVE: Estimate the effect of mind body training, specifically, the Relaxation Response Resiliency Program (3RP) on healthcare utilization. DESIGN: Retrospective controlled cohort observational study. Setting: Major US Academic Health Network. Sample: All patients receiving 3RP at the MGH Benson-Henry Institute from 1/12/2006 to 7/1/2014 (n = 4452), controls (n = 13149) followed for a median of 4.2 years (.85–8.4 yrs). Measurements: Utilization as measured by billable encounters/year (be/yr) stratified by encounter type: clinical, imaging, laboratory and procedural, by class of chief complaint: e.g., Cardiovascular, and by site of care delivery, e.g., Emergency Department. Subgroup analysis by propensity score matched pre-intervention utilization rate. RESULTS: At one year, total utilization for the intervention group decreased by 43% [53.5 to 30.5 be/yr] (p <0.0001). Clinical encounters decreased by 41.9% [40 to 23.2 be/yr], imaging by 50.3% [11.5 to 5.7 be/yr], lab encounters by 43.5% [9.8 to 5.6], and procedures by 21.4% [2.2 to 1.7 be/yr], all p < 0.01. The intervention group’s Emergency department (ED) visits decreased from 3.6 to 1.7/year (p<0.0001) and Hospital and Urgent care visits converged with the controls. Subgroup analysis (identically matched initial utilization rates—Intervention group: high utilizing controls) showed the intervention group significantly reduced utilization relative to the control group by: 18.3% across all functional categories, 24.7% across all site categories and 25.3% across all clinical categories. CONCLUSION: Mind body interventions such as 3RP have the potential to substantially reduce healthcare utilization at relatively low cost and thus can serve as key components in any population health and health care delivery system. Public Library of Science 2015-10-13 /pmc/articles/PMC4603901/ /pubmed/26461184 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0140212 Text en © 2015 Stahl et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ 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 properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Stahl, James E.
Dossett, Michelle L.
LaJoie, A. Scott
Denninger, John W.
Mehta, Darshan H.
Goldman, Roberta
Fricchione, Gregory L.
Benson, Herbert
Relaxation Response and Resiliency Training and Its Effect on Healthcare Resource Utilization
title Relaxation Response and Resiliency Training and Its Effect on Healthcare Resource Utilization
title_full Relaxation Response and Resiliency Training and Its Effect on Healthcare Resource Utilization
title_fullStr Relaxation Response and Resiliency Training and Its Effect on Healthcare Resource Utilization
title_full_unstemmed Relaxation Response and Resiliency Training and Its Effect on Healthcare Resource Utilization
title_short Relaxation Response and Resiliency Training and Its Effect on Healthcare Resource Utilization
title_sort relaxation response and resiliency training and its effect on healthcare resource utilization
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4603901/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26461184
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0140212
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