Economic evaluation of a wearable-based intervention to increase physical activity among insufficiently active middle-aged adults

Jack H. Ching, Steve Duff, John Hernandez
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Abstract

Background: Physical activity levels worldwide have declined over recent decades, with the average number of daily steps decreasing steadily since 1995. Given that physical inactivity is a major modifiable risk factor for chronic disease and mortality, increasing the level of physical activity is a clear opportunity to improve population health on a broad scale. The current study aims to assess the cost-effectiveness and budget impact of a Fitbit-based intervention among healthy, but insufficiently active, adults to quantify the potential clinical and economic value for a commercially insured population in the U.S. Methods: An economic model was developed to compare physical activity, health outcomes, costs, and quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) associated with usual care and a Fitbit-based intervention that consists of a consumer wearable device alongside goal setting and feedback features provided in a companion software application. Improvement in physical activity was measured in terms of mean daily step count. The effects of increased daily step count were characterized as reduced short-term healthcare costs and decreased incidence of chronic diseases with corresponding improvement in health utility and reduced disease costs. Published literature, standardized costing resources, and data from a National Institutes of Health-funded research program were utilized. Cost-effectiveness and budget impact analyses were performed for a hypothetical cohort of middle-aged adults. Results: The base case cost-effectiveness results found the Fitbit intervention to be dominant (less costly and more effective) compared to usual care. Discounted 15-year incremental costs and QALYs were -$1,257 and 0.011, respectively. In probabilistic analyses, the Fitbit intervention was dominant in 93% of simulations and either dominant or cost-effective (defined as less than $150,000/QALY gained) in 99.4% of simulations. For budget impact analyses conducted from the perspective of a U.S. Commercial payer, the Fitbit intervention was estimated to save approximately $6.5-million dollars over 2 years and $8.5-million dollars over 5 years for a cohort of 8,000 participants. Although the economic analysis results were very robust, the short-term healthcare cost savings were the most uncertain in this population and warrant further research. Conclusions: There is abundant evidence documenting the benefits of wearable activity trackers when used to increase physical activity as measured by daily step counts. Our research provides additional health economic evidence supporting implementation of wearable-based interventions to improve population health and offers compelling support for payers to consider including wearable-based physical activity interventions as part of a comprehensive portfolio of preventive health offerings for their insured populations.
对基于可穿戴设备的干预措施进行经济评估,以增加不够活跃的中年人的体育活动量
背景:近几十年来,全世界的体力活动水平都在下降,自 1995 年以来,每天的平均步数持续减少。鉴于缺乏体力活动是慢性病和死亡率的主要可改变风险因素,提高体力活动水平显然是广泛改善人口健康的一个机会。本研究旨在评估基于 Fitbit 的干预措施在健康但活动不足的成年人中的成本效益和预算影响,以量化其对美国商业保险人群的潜在临床和经济价值:开发了一个经济模型,以比较与常规护理相关的体育锻炼、健康结果、成本和质量调整生命年(QALYs),以及基于 Fitbit 的干预措施,该干预措施包括一个消费者可穿戴设备以及配套软件应用程序中提供的目标设定和反馈功能。体育锻炼的改善以平均每日步数来衡量。增加每日步数的效果表现为降低短期医疗费用和减少慢性病发病率,并相应提高健康效用和降低疾病成本。研究利用了已发表的文献、标准化成本计算资源以及美国国立卫生研究院资助的研究项目数据。对假定的中年人群进行了成本效益和预算影响分析。分析结果基础案例的成本效益结果显示,Fitbit 干预与常规护理相比具有优势(成本更低、更有效)。贴现后的 15 年增量成本和 QALY 分别为-1,257 美元和 0.011。在概率分析中,Fitbit 干预在 93% 的模拟中占主导地位,在 99.4% 的模拟中占主导地位或具有成本效益(定义为低于 150,000 美元/QALY)。从美国商业支付方的角度进行的预算影响分析显示,Fitbit 干预估计可在 2 年内为 8,000 名参与者节省约 650 万美元,在 5 年内节省约 850 万美元。虽然经济分析结果非常可靠,但在这一人群中,短期医疗成本节约的不确定性最大,值得进一步研究。结论:有大量证据表明,可穿戴活动追踪器可用于增加以每日步数为衡量标准的体力活动。我们的研究提供了更多的健康经济证据,支持实施基于可穿戴设备的干预措施来改善人群健康,并为支付方提供了有力支持,使其考虑将基于可穿戴设备的体育锻炼干预措施作为其投保人群预防性保健综合产品组合的一部分。
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