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Fracture liaison service utilising an emergency department information system to identify patients effectively reduce re‐fracture rate is cost‐effective and cost saving in Western Australia

OBJECTIVES: To assess the benefits of the Emergency Department Information System (EDIS)‐linked fracture liaison service (FLS). METHODS: Patients identified through EDIS were invited to attend an FLS at the intervention hospital, the Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital (SCGS‐FLS). The intervention group w...

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Autores principales: Inderjeeth, Charles A., Raymond, Warren D., Geelhoed, Elizabeth, Briggs, Andrew M., Oldham, David, Mountain, David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9545318/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35811331
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ajag.13107
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author Inderjeeth, Charles A.
Raymond, Warren D.
Geelhoed, Elizabeth
Briggs, Andrew M.
Oldham, David
Mountain, David
author_facet Inderjeeth, Charles A.
Raymond, Warren D.
Geelhoed, Elizabeth
Briggs, Andrew M.
Oldham, David
Mountain, David
author_sort Inderjeeth, Charles A.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: To assess the benefits of the Emergency Department Information System (EDIS)‐linked fracture liaison service (FLS). METHODS: Patients identified through EDIS were invited to attend an FLS at the intervention hospital, the Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital (SCGS‐FLS). The intervention group was compared to usual care. Retrospective control (RC) at this hospital determined historical fracture risk (SCGH‐RC). Prospective control (PC) was from a comparator, Fremantle Hospital (FH‐PC). The main outcome measures were cost‐effectiveness from a health system perspective and quality of life by EuroQOL (EQ‐5D). Bottom‐up cost of medical care, against the cost of managing recurrent fracture (weighted basket), was determined from the literature and 2013/14 Australian Refined Diagnosis Related Groups (AR‐DRG) prices. Mean incremental cost‐effectiveness ratios were simulated from 5000 bootstrap iterations. Cost‐effectiveness acceptability curves were generated. RESULTS: The SCGH‐FLS program reduced absolute re‐fracture rates versus control cohorts (9.2–10.2%), producing an estimated cost saving of AUD$750,168–AUD$810,400 per 1000 patient‐years in the first year. Between‐groups QALYs differed with worse outcomes in both control groups (p < 0.001). The SCGH‐FLS compared with SCGH‐RC and FH‐PC had a mean incremental cost of $8721 (95% CI −$1218, $35,044) and $8974 (95% CI −$26,701, $69,929), respectively, per 1% reduction in 12‐month recurrent fracture risk. The SCGH‐FLS compared with SCGH‐RC and FH‐PC had a mean incremental cost of $292 (95% CI −$3588, $3380) and −$261 (95% CI −$1521, $471) per EQ‐5D QALY gained at 12 months respectively. With societal willingness to pay of $16,000, recurrent fracture is reduced by 1% in >80% of patients. CONCLUSIONS: This simple and easy model of identification and intervention demonstrated efficacy in reducing rates of recurrent fracture and was cost‐effective and potentially cost saving.
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spelling pubmed-95453182022-10-14 Fracture liaison service utilising an emergency department information system to identify patients effectively reduce re‐fracture rate is cost‐effective and cost saving in Western Australia Inderjeeth, Charles A. Raymond, Warren D. Geelhoed, Elizabeth Briggs, Andrew M. Oldham, David Mountain, David Australas J Ageing Research Articles OBJECTIVES: To assess the benefits of the Emergency Department Information System (EDIS)‐linked fracture liaison service (FLS). METHODS: Patients identified through EDIS were invited to attend an FLS at the intervention hospital, the Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital (SCGS‐FLS). The intervention group was compared to usual care. Retrospective control (RC) at this hospital determined historical fracture risk (SCGH‐RC). Prospective control (PC) was from a comparator, Fremantle Hospital (FH‐PC). The main outcome measures were cost‐effectiveness from a health system perspective and quality of life by EuroQOL (EQ‐5D). Bottom‐up cost of medical care, against the cost of managing recurrent fracture (weighted basket), was determined from the literature and 2013/14 Australian Refined Diagnosis Related Groups (AR‐DRG) prices. Mean incremental cost‐effectiveness ratios were simulated from 5000 bootstrap iterations. Cost‐effectiveness acceptability curves were generated. RESULTS: The SCGH‐FLS program reduced absolute re‐fracture rates versus control cohorts (9.2–10.2%), producing an estimated cost saving of AUD$750,168–AUD$810,400 per 1000 patient‐years in the first year. Between‐groups QALYs differed with worse outcomes in both control groups (p < 0.001). The SCGH‐FLS compared with SCGH‐RC and FH‐PC had a mean incremental cost of $8721 (95% CI −$1218, $35,044) and $8974 (95% CI −$26,701, $69,929), respectively, per 1% reduction in 12‐month recurrent fracture risk. The SCGH‐FLS compared with SCGH‐RC and FH‐PC had a mean incremental cost of $292 (95% CI −$3588, $3380) and −$261 (95% CI −$1521, $471) per EQ‐5D QALY gained at 12 months respectively. With societal willingness to pay of $16,000, recurrent fracture is reduced by 1% in >80% of patients. CONCLUSIONS: This simple and easy model of identification and intervention demonstrated efficacy in reducing rates of recurrent fracture and was cost‐effective and potentially cost saving. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022-07-10 2022-09 /pmc/articles/PMC9545318/ /pubmed/35811331 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ajag.13107 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Australasian Journal on Ageing published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of AJA Inc’. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Inderjeeth, Charles A.
Raymond, Warren D.
Geelhoed, Elizabeth
Briggs, Andrew M.
Oldham, David
Mountain, David
Fracture liaison service utilising an emergency department information system to identify patients effectively reduce re‐fracture rate is cost‐effective and cost saving in Western Australia
title Fracture liaison service utilising an emergency department information system to identify patients effectively reduce re‐fracture rate is cost‐effective and cost saving in Western Australia
title_full Fracture liaison service utilising an emergency department information system to identify patients effectively reduce re‐fracture rate is cost‐effective and cost saving in Western Australia
title_fullStr Fracture liaison service utilising an emergency department information system to identify patients effectively reduce re‐fracture rate is cost‐effective and cost saving in Western Australia
title_full_unstemmed Fracture liaison service utilising an emergency department information system to identify patients effectively reduce re‐fracture rate is cost‐effective and cost saving in Western Australia
title_short Fracture liaison service utilising an emergency department information system to identify patients effectively reduce re‐fracture rate is cost‐effective and cost saving in Western Australia
title_sort fracture liaison service utilising an emergency department information system to identify patients effectively reduce re‐fracture rate is cost‐effective and cost saving in western australia
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9545318/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35811331
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ajag.13107
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