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Assessment of Utilization and Cost-Effectiveness of Telemedicine Program in Western Regions of China: A 12-Year Study of 249 Hospitals Across 112 Cities.

Authors :
Ting-Ting Wang
Jin-Mei Li
Cai-Rong Zhu
Zhen Hong
Dong-Mei An
Hong-Yu Yang
Jie-Chuan Ren
Xue-Mei Zou
Cheng Huang
Xiao-Sa Chi
Jia-Ni Chen
Wen-Zhi Wang
Cai-Gang Xu
Li He
Wei-Min Li
Dong Zhou
Source :
Telemedicine & e-Health. Nov2016, Vol. 22 Issue 11, p909-920. 12p.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Background: The imbalance in healthcare between urban and rural areas is still a problem in China. In recent decades, China has aimed to develop telemedicine. We assessed the implementation, utilization, and cost-effectiveness of a large telemedicine program across western China. Materials and Methods: In 2002-2013, a government-sponsored major telemedicine program was established by West China Hospital of Sichuan University (hub), covering 249 spoke hospitals in 112 cities throughout western China and in 40 medical expertise areas. We analyzed the cross-sectional data from 11,987 consultations conducted at West China Hospital using the telemedicine network over a 12-year period. The types of diseases as well as the diagnosis and treatment changes were assessed. We also performed a cost-savings analysis and a one-way sensitivity analysis. Results: Of the 11,987 teleconsultations, we noted that neoplasms (19.4%), injuries (13.9%), and circulatory diseases (10.3%) were the three most common diagnoses. Teleconsultations resulted in a change of diagnosis in 4,772 (39.8%) patients, and 3,707 (77.7%) of them underwent major diagnosis changes. Moreover, it led to a change of treatment in 6,591 (55.0%) patients, including 3,677 (55.8%) changes not linked to diagnosis changes. The telemedicine network resulted in an estimated net saving of $2,364,525 (if the patients traveled to the hub) or $3,759,014 (if the specialists traveled to the spoke hospitals). Conclusions: The introduction of telemedicine in China, linking highly specialized major hospitals (hub) with hundreds of small rural hospitals (spoke), can greatly improve the quality, efficiency, and costeffectiveness of healthcare delivery and utilization. This new Internet-based healthcare model should be utilized more widely in developing countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15305627
Volume :
22
Issue :
11
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Telemedicine & e-Health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
119446487
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1089/tmj.2015.0213