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Cost-effectiveness of a day hospital falls prevention programme for screened community-dwelling older people at high risk of falls.

Authors :
Irvine, Lisa
Conroy, Simon P.
Sach, Tracey
Gladman, John R. F.
Harwood, Rowan H.
Kendrick, Denise
Coupland, Carol
Drummond, Avril
Barton, Garry
Masud, Tahir
Source :
Age & Ageing; Nov2010, Vol. 39 Issue 6, p710-716, 7p, 3 Charts, 1 Graph
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Background: multifactorial falls prevention programmes for older people have been proved to reduce falls. However, evidence of their cost-effectiveness is mixed.Design: economic evaluation alongside pragmatic randomised controlled trial.Intervention: randomised trial of 364 people aged ≥70, living in the community, recruited via GP and identified as high risk of falling. Both arms received a falls prevention information leaflet. The intervention arm were also offered a (day hospital) multidisciplinary falls prevention programme, including physiotherapy, occupational therapy, nurse, medical review and referral to other specialists.Measurements: self-reported falls, as collected in 12 monthly diaries. Levels of health resource use associated with the falls prevention programme, screening (both attributed to intervention arm only) and other health-care contacts were monitored. Mean NHS costs and falls per person per year were estimated for both arms, along with the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) and cost effectiveness acceptability curve.Results: in the base-case analysis, the mean falls programme cost was £349 per person. This, coupled with higher screening and other health-care costs, resulted in a mean incremental cost of £578 for the intervention arm. The mean falls rate was lower in the intervention arm (2.07 per person/year), compared with the control arm (2.24). The estimated ICER was £3,320 per fall averted.Conclusions: the estimated ICER was £3,320 per fall averted. Future research should focus on adherence to the intervention and an assessment of impact on quality of life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00020729
Volume :
39
Issue :
6
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Age & Ageing
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
54567426
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afq108