A societal cost-benefit analysis of falls prevention in community-dwelling older people in the Netherlands

IF 3.9
Martien J.M. Panneman , Ed F. van Beeck , Branko F. Olij , Juanita A. Haagsma , Frans van Zoest , Judith I. Kuiper , Suzanne Polinder
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Aging populations face rising incidents of falls among older people, leading to increased healthcare costs. Preventive measures can reduce this burden and associated costs. However, implementing falls prevention interventions causes costs for society. In order to gain insight in the balance between investments and gains for society the Societal Cost Benefit Analysis (SCBA) methodology can be applied. We conducted a societal cost-benefit analysis (SCBA) of falls prevention interventions in the Netherlands in order to show the stepwise approach, data sources needed and analyses that characterize this method.

Methods

We used SCBA to assess falls prevention interventions' costs and benefits for three stakeholders: private health insurance companies, the national government, and local government. We created five healthcare scenarios for falls prevention interventions, involving informal care, primary care, home care, social work, and an integral scenario. Our SCBA model considered all associated costs with case-finding, screening, and recruitment for each scenario, as well as multifactorial falls prevention programs' costs and benefits, such as reduced healthcare expenses and health gains (DALYs).

Results

All scenarios lead to health gains, ranging from 90 averted DALYs in the informal care to 300 in the primary care scenario.The net benefits per 100,000 senior citizens of falls prevention programs range from €0.2- €5.6 million respectively for social care and home care scenario with benefit-cost ratios of respectively 1.1 and 2.5. Sensitivity analysis revealed that a lower age limit accompanied by a low initial fall risk for recruitment significantly influence the SCBA outcomes.

Conclusion

Structural implementation of evidence-based falls prevention can provide significant health benefits and net cost savings, supporting its implementation at the societal level. The SCBA offers guidance to policymakers on the optimal falls prevention programs for older people, reducing the disease burden of falls in the Netherlands.

Abstract Image

荷兰社区老年人预防跌倒的社会成本效益分析
老龄化人口面临着老年人跌倒事件的增加,导致医疗成本增加。预防措施可以减轻这种负担和相关费用。然而,实施预防跌倒干预措施会给社会带来成本。为了深入了解投资和社会收益之间的平衡,可以应用社会成本效益分析(SCBA)方法。我们对荷兰的预防跌倒干预措施进行了社会成本效益分析(SCBA),以显示逐步方法、所需的数据来源和该方法的特征分析。方法我们使用SCBA对三个利益相关者(私人健康保险公司、国家政府和地方政府)评估预防跌倒干预措施的成本和收益。我们为预防跌倒干预创造了五种医疗情景,包括非正式护理、初级护理、家庭护理、社会工作和综合情景。我们的SCBA模型考虑了每种情况下病例发现、筛查和招募的所有相关成本,以及多因素预防跌倒项目的成本和收益,如减少医疗费用和健康收益(DALYs)。结果所有情景都带来了健康收益,从非正式护理情景中避免的90个残疾调整生命年到初级保健情景中避免的300个残疾调整生命年不等。在社会护理和家庭护理方案中,每10万名老年人从预防跌倒项目中获得的净收益分别为20万至560万欧元,收益成本比分别为1.1和2.5。敏感性分析显示,较低的年龄限制和较低的初始跌倒风险显著影响SCBA的结果。结论循证跌倒预防的结构性实施可提供显著的健康效益和净成本节约,支持其在社会层面的实施。SCBA为政策制定者提供关于老年人最佳跌倒预防计划的指导,减轻了荷兰跌倒的疾病负担。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Experimental gerontology
Experimental gerontology Ageing, Biochemistry, Geriatrics and Gerontology
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
0.00%
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审稿时长
66 days
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