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Can telemedicine initiative be an effective intervention strategy for improving treatment compliance for pediatric HIV patients: Evidences on costs and improvement in treatment compliance from Maharashtra, India

BACKGROUND: India has recently introduced telemedicine initiatives to enhance access to specialized care at a low cost for the pediatric HIV patients, who face multiple challenges due to growing disease burden and limited preparedness of the health system to address it. There are limited evidences o...

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Autores principales: Rout, Sarit Kumar, Gabhale, Yashwant R., Dutta, Ambarish, Balakrishnan, Sudha, Lala, Mamatha M., Setia, Maninder Singh, Bhuyan, Khanindra, Manglani, Mamta V.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6782091/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31593580
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223303
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author Rout, Sarit Kumar
Gabhale, Yashwant R.
Dutta, Ambarish
Balakrishnan, Sudha
Lala, Mamatha M.
Setia, Maninder Singh
Bhuyan, Khanindra
Manglani, Mamta V.
author_facet Rout, Sarit Kumar
Gabhale, Yashwant R.
Dutta, Ambarish
Balakrishnan, Sudha
Lala, Mamatha M.
Setia, Maninder Singh
Bhuyan, Khanindra
Manglani, Mamta V.
author_sort Rout, Sarit Kumar
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: India has recently introduced telemedicine initiatives to enhance access to specialized care at a low cost for the pediatric HIV patients, who face multiple challenges due to growing disease burden and limited preparedness of the health system to address it. There are limited evidences on the cost-effectiveness of these interventions. This study was undertaken in Maharashtra, a province, located in the western region of the country, to inform policy regarding the effectiveness of this programme. The objective was to estimate the unit cost of ART services for pediatric HIV patients and examine the efficiency in the use of resource and treatment compliance resulting from telemedicine initiatives in pediatric HIV compared to usual ART services. METHODS: We selected 6 ART centers (3 from linked centers linked to Pediatric HIV Centre of Excellence (PCoE) and 3 from non-linked centers) randomly from three high, middle and low ART centers, categorized on the basis of case load in each arm. A bottom up costing methodology was adopted to understand the unit cost of services. Loss to follow up and timeliness of the visits were compared between the two arms and were linked to the cost. RESULTS: The average cost per-visit was INR 1803 in the linked centers and that for the non-linked centers was INR 3412. There has been 5 percentage point improvement in lost to follow-up in the linked centers compared to non-linked centers against a back-drop of a reduction in per-pediatric patient cost of INR 557. The linkage has resulted in increase in timeliness of the visits in linked centers compared to non-linked centers. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: The telemedicine linkage led to an increase in the case load leading to a decrease in cost. The evidence on efficiency in the use of resource and improvement in treatment compliance as suggested by this study could be used to scale up this initiative.
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spelling pubmed-67820912019-10-19 Can telemedicine initiative be an effective intervention strategy for improving treatment compliance for pediatric HIV patients: Evidences on costs and improvement in treatment compliance from Maharashtra, India Rout, Sarit Kumar Gabhale, Yashwant R. Dutta, Ambarish Balakrishnan, Sudha Lala, Mamatha M. Setia, Maninder Singh Bhuyan, Khanindra Manglani, Mamta V. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: India has recently introduced telemedicine initiatives to enhance access to specialized care at a low cost for the pediatric HIV patients, who face multiple challenges due to growing disease burden and limited preparedness of the health system to address it. There are limited evidences on the cost-effectiveness of these interventions. This study was undertaken in Maharashtra, a province, located in the western region of the country, to inform policy regarding the effectiveness of this programme. The objective was to estimate the unit cost of ART services for pediatric HIV patients and examine the efficiency in the use of resource and treatment compliance resulting from telemedicine initiatives in pediatric HIV compared to usual ART services. METHODS: We selected 6 ART centers (3 from linked centers linked to Pediatric HIV Centre of Excellence (PCoE) and 3 from non-linked centers) randomly from three high, middle and low ART centers, categorized on the basis of case load in each arm. A bottom up costing methodology was adopted to understand the unit cost of services. Loss to follow up and timeliness of the visits were compared between the two arms and were linked to the cost. RESULTS: The average cost per-visit was INR 1803 in the linked centers and that for the non-linked centers was INR 3412. There has been 5 percentage point improvement in lost to follow-up in the linked centers compared to non-linked centers against a back-drop of a reduction in per-pediatric patient cost of INR 557. The linkage has resulted in increase in timeliness of the visits in linked centers compared to non-linked centers. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: The telemedicine linkage led to an increase in the case load leading to a decrease in cost. The evidence on efficiency in the use of resource and improvement in treatment compliance as suggested by this study could be used to scale up this initiative. Public Library of Science 2019-10-08 /pmc/articles/PMC6782091/ /pubmed/31593580 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223303 Text en © 2019 Rout 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Rout, Sarit Kumar
Gabhale, Yashwant R.
Dutta, Ambarish
Balakrishnan, Sudha
Lala, Mamatha M.
Setia, Maninder Singh
Bhuyan, Khanindra
Manglani, Mamta V.
Can telemedicine initiative be an effective intervention strategy for improving treatment compliance for pediatric HIV patients: Evidences on costs and improvement in treatment compliance from Maharashtra, India
title Can telemedicine initiative be an effective intervention strategy for improving treatment compliance for pediatric HIV patients: Evidences on costs and improvement in treatment compliance from Maharashtra, India
title_full Can telemedicine initiative be an effective intervention strategy for improving treatment compliance for pediatric HIV patients: Evidences on costs and improvement in treatment compliance from Maharashtra, India
title_fullStr Can telemedicine initiative be an effective intervention strategy for improving treatment compliance for pediatric HIV patients: Evidences on costs and improvement in treatment compliance from Maharashtra, India
title_full_unstemmed Can telemedicine initiative be an effective intervention strategy for improving treatment compliance for pediatric HIV patients: Evidences on costs and improvement in treatment compliance from Maharashtra, India
title_short Can telemedicine initiative be an effective intervention strategy for improving treatment compliance for pediatric HIV patients: Evidences on costs and improvement in treatment compliance from Maharashtra, India
title_sort can telemedicine initiative be an effective intervention strategy for improving treatment compliance for pediatric hiv patients: evidences on costs and improvement in treatment compliance from maharashtra, india
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6782091/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31593580
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223303
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