为社会融合量身定制的初级保健服务物有所值吗?采用蒙特卡洛概率敏感性分析的卫生经济学评价,比较针对社会排斥人群的量身定制的社会包容初级保健服务与主流初级保健服务。

IF 4.5 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Síle Kelly, Anne Dee, Patrick O'Donnell
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:被社会排斥的人群(SEP)的生活资源如此不足,以至于他们无法充分参与社会正常可接受的生活水平。他们往往有复杂的健康和社会护理需求,但在获得主流医疗保健方面却面临结构性和态度上的障碍。这可能会导致社区中对门诊护理敏感的情况得不到治疗,并导致SEP在危机模式下更多地使用昂贵的急性服务。量身定制的社会包容初级保健(SIPC)服务可以提供一种灵活的方法来接触并满足这一边缘化人群的需求。从公共资助的保健和社会服务的角度来看,几乎没有证据表明这些服务的经济效益。本研究的目的是对爱尔兰中西部地区的一家单中心SIPC诊所进行为期12个月的经济评估(成本-后果分析),并确定其物有所值。该分析比较了有机会获得定制SIPC服务的SEP与没有机会获得定制SIPC服务的SEP之间的成本结果。方法:对兼职SIPC服务进行成本分析,基于爱尔兰卫生服务执行局(HSE)急性护理使用和成本的可用数据,并使用文献综述来确定经济框架的成本和结果参数。采用蒙特卡罗模拟方法进行多变量概率敏感性分析,评估模型的不确定性。结果:在为292个人提供护理的兼职SIPC服务上投资的成本估计为718,890.90欧元,在12个月的时间里估计节省了658个床位日。这意味着每花费1欧元,就能获得3.71欧元的投资回报。敏感性分析支持的估计只有2.2%的可能性为负的投资回报。结论:本研究发现,从公共资助的卫生服务的角度来看,投资于能够满足边缘化人口需求的SIPC服务具有良好的物有所值。研究结果对支持利益攸关方、决策者和预算持有人在卫生和社会服务领域做出循证公平决策以实现最佳资金分配具有重要价值。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Are tailored primary care services for social inclusion good value for money? A health economics evaluation with Monte-Carlo probabilistic sensitivity analysis comparing tailored social inclusion primary care services to mainstream primary care services for socially excluded people.

Background: Socially excluded groups of people (SEP) live with resources so inadequate that it precludes them from participating fully in the normal acceptable living standards of society. They often have complex health and social care needs yet face structural and attitudinal barriers accessing mainstream healthcare. This can result in ambulatory-care sensitive conditions being left untreated in the community and contributes to the higher use of costly acute services in crisis mode by SEP. Tailored social inclusion primary care (SIPC) services can provide a flexible approach to engage with and meet the needs of this marginalised population. There is little evidence on the economic benefit of these services from the perspective of the publicly-funded health and social services. The aim of this study is to conduct an economic evaluation (cost-consequence analysis) of a single-centre SIPC clinic in the Mid-West region of Ireland over a 12-month period and to determine its value for money. The analysis compares cost outcomes between SEP who have access to a tailored SIPC service with those who do not.

Methods: A cost analysis of the part-time SIPC service, based on available Irish-sourced data on the usage and costs of acute care in the Health Service Executive (HSE), and a literature review were used to identify the cost and outcome parameters of the economic framework. A multi-variate probabilistic sensitivity analysis using Monte Carlo Simulation methodology was used to assess model uncertainty.

Results: The cost savings of investing in the part-time SIPC service providing care to 292 individuals, were estimated to be €718,890.90 with an estimated 658 bed days saved over a 12-month period. This represented a return of investment of €3.71 for every €1 spent. The sensitivity analysis supported the estimates with just a 2.2% likelihood of a negative return of investment.

Conclusion: This study found that investment in SIPC services, that can meet the needs of a marginalised population, represents good value for money from the perspective of the publicly funded health service. The findings are valuable in supporting stakeholders, policy-makers, and budget holders to make evidence-informed equitable decisions for optimal funding allocation within health and social services.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
4.20%
发文量
162
审稿时长
28 weeks
期刊介绍: International Journal for Equity in Health is an Open Access, peer-reviewed, online journal presenting evidence relevant to the search for, and attainment of, equity in health across and within countries. International Journal for Equity in Health aims to improve the understanding of issues that influence the health of populations. This includes the discussion of political, policy-related, economic, social and health services-related influences, particularly with regard to systematic differences in distributions of one or more aspects of health in population groups defined demographically, geographically, or socially.
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