| Literature DB >> 27089968 |
Talitha I Verhoef1, Parita Doshi2, Dan Lehner2, Stephen Morris3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Oomph! Wellness organises interactive exercise and activity classes (Oomph! classes) for older people in care homes. We investigated the cost-effectiveness of Oomph! classes.Entities:
Keywords: Care homes; Cost-effectiveness; Physical activity; Quality of life
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27089968 PMCID: PMC4836064 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-016-0261-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Gender and age distribution of respondents
| All respondents ( | Included for analysis on health related quality of life ( | Included for analysis on health service use ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | |||
| Female | 75.0 % | 81.3 % | 88.2 % |
| Male | 6.3 % | 6.3 % | - |
| Missing | 18.8 % | 12.5 % | 11.8 % |
| Age | |||
| 70–79 | 14.5 % | 18.8 % | 17.6 % |
| 80–89 | 41.7 % | 43.8 % | 47.1 % |
| 90–99 | 25.0 % | 25.0 % | 29.4 % |
| >100 | 4.2 % | 6.3 % | - |
| Missing | 14.0 % | 6.3 % | 5.9 % |
Results of the EQ-5D-5 L questionnaire (and 95 % confidence intervals) at the three different points in time
|
| 3 months Pre-Oomph! classes | Immediately Pre-Oomph! classes | 3 months Post-Oomph! classes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Proportion reporting any problems in domain | |||
| Mobility | 0.875 (0.57–0.97) | 0.875 (0.57–0.97) | 0.750 (0.46–0.91) |
| Self-care | 0.625 (0.35–0.84) | 0.813 (0.51–0.95) | 0.750 (0.46–0.91) |
| Usual activities | 0.563 (0.30–0.80) | 0.500 (0.25–0.75) | 0.375 (0.16–0.65) |
| Pain/discomfort | 0.750 (0.46–0.91) | 0.813 (0.51–0.95) | 0.563 (0.30–0.80) |
| Anxiety/depression | 0.625 (0.35–0.84) | 0.563 (0.30–0.80) | 0.438 (0.20–0.70) |
| Utility scores | |||
| Unadjusted | 0.562 (0.41–0.72) | 0.520 (0.34–0.70) | 0.604 (0.44–0.76) |
| Adjusted for Age and Gender | 0.562 (0.40–0.73) | 0.520 (0.36–0.68) | 0.604 (0.46–0.75) |
Full range of utility scores were -0.127 to 1 3 months pre-Oomph! classes, -0.142 to 1 Immediately Pre-Oomph! classes and -0.037 to 1 3 months post Oomph! classes
Number of GP visits, hospital visits and NHS costs (and 95 % confidence intervals)
| Unadjusted | Adjusted for Age and Gender | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| During the 3 months before start of Oomph! classes | During the 3 months after start of Oomph! classes | During the 3 months before start of Oomph! classes | During the 3 months after start of Oomph! classes |
| GP visits | 1.765 (1.04 ; 2.49) | 2.235 (1.02 ; 3.45) | 1.793 (1.06 ; 2.53) | 2.201 (1.11 ; 3.29) |
| Hospital outpatient visits | 0.529 (0.08 ; 0.98) | 0.294 (−0.07 ; 0.66) | 0.526 (0.12 ; 0.93) | 0.296 (−0.05 ; 0.65) |
| NHS costs | £139 (£67 ; £211) | £135 (£57 ; £213) | £141 (£74 ; £209) | £132 (£67 ; £198) |
Calculation of the costs of the Oomph! classes
| Parameter name | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| Costs of training staff (activities coordinators) to run classes, per home | £915 | Licence fee + 2 days staff time, incurred once |
| Number of classes per home | 98.4 per year | Average of 8.2 per month in 159 care homes |
| Time spent per class | 50 min | 40 + 10 min preparation |
| Costs of activities coordinator | £20/hour | PPSRU—Agenda for Change band 2 |
| Total costs per home per year | £2555 | £915 + 98.4*50*20/60 |
| Number of participants per home | 17.2 | Average number of participants (residents that attended at least one class per month) in 159 care homes |
| Total costs per participant per year a | £148.55 | 2555/17.2 |
a Total costs per participant are an average for all participants; some may only attend one class per month while others attend several classes per month
Fig. 1Alternative scenarios. These graphs show the different assumptions about the quality of life in the first year after the start of the Oomph! classes for each scenario. a Base case scenario, (b) Best case scenario, (c) Worst case scenario
One-year costs and QALYs per participant and cost-effectiveness results for each scenario
| Scenario | Costs (95 % confidence interval) | QALYs (95 % confidence interval) | Cost/QALY gained (95 % confidence interval) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Base case | Oomph! classes | £677 (443 to 974) | 0.594 (0.468 to 0.702) | |
| Control | £564 (331 to 867) | 0.520 (0.373 to 0.666) | ||
| Increment | £113 (−265 to 496) | 0.074 (−0.094 to 0.244) | £1531 a (Dominant [-£4931] to dominated [-£1604]) | |
| Best case | Oomph! classes | £676 (443 to 974) | 0.594 (0.468 to 0.702) | |
| Control | £564 (331 to 867) | 0.483 (0.331 to 0.640) | ||
| Increment | £112 (−265 to 496) | 0.110 (−0.077 to 0.290) | £1021 a (Dominant [-£4149] to dominated [-£2519]) | |
| Worst case | Oomph! classes | £704 (514 to 945) | 0.531 (0.400 to 0.659) | |
| Control | £564 (331 to 867) | 0.520 (0.373 to 0.666) | ||
| Increment | £140 (42 to 237) | 0.011 (−0.013 to 0.035) | £13,290 a (£2788 to dominated [-£7907]) |
a £/QALY gained may differ from calculation of incremental costs/incremental QALYs as shown, due to rounding
Fig. 2Scatter plot. These graphs show the incremental costs and incremental QALYs for each simulation of the probabilistic sensitivity analysis. a Base case scenario, (b) Best case scenario, (c) Worst case scenario
One-way sensitivity analysis
| Scenario | Cost/QALY gained |
|---|---|
| Base case | £1531 |
| Total costs for Oomph! classes per participant: £100 | £871 |
| Total costs for Oomph! classes per participant: £200 | £2231 |
| NHS costs per 3 months without Oomph! classes: £74 | £5178 |
| NHS costs per 3 months without Oomph! classes: £209 | Oomph! classes are dominant |
| NHS costs per 3 months with Oomph! classes: £67 | Oomph! classes are dominant |
| NHS costs per 3 months with Oomph! classes: £198 | £5123 |
| Utility immediately pre-Oomph! classes: 0.36 | £527 |
| Utility immediately pre-Oomph! classes: 0.68 | Oomph! classes are dominated |
| Utility 3 months post-Oomph! classes: 0.46 | Oomph!classes are dominated |
| Utility 3 months post-Oomph! classes: 0.75 | £559 |
Fig. 3Cost-effectiveness acceptability curve. This graph shows for each scenario the probability that Oomph! classes would be cost-effective at different willingness to pay thresholds