| Literature DB >> 28910342 |
Nick Wilson1, Giorgi Kvizhinadze1, Frank Pega1, Nisha Nair1, Tony Blakely1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is some evidence that home safety assessment and modification (HSAM) is effective in reducing falls in older people. But there are various knowledge gaps, including around cost-effectiveness and also the impacts at a health district-level. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28910342 PMCID: PMC5598974 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0184538
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographic, epidemiological, intervention and cost parameters for modeling the home safety assessment and modification (HSAM) intervention for preventing falls in a health district population (Counties Manukau District Health Board [CMDHB]).
| Parameter | Source/s | Selected values (as appropriate) | Trends, uncertainty and additional details. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Population (aged 65+) in CMDHB. | Statistics New Zealand (SNZ) estimates for 2011 by sex, age-group and ethnicity. | 41,736 | The population in CMDHB for 2011 was interpolated from the 2006 and 2013 censuses. |
| Annual probability of moving into residential aged care facilities (%) (national level data). | New Zealand (NZ) Census of Population and Dwellings 2013. | Range: 0% to 2% (varies by age-group). | The people who transition to residential aged care facilities were treated as no longer potentially being able to benefit from the HSAM intervention. |
| Annual probability of moving house | NZ Census of Population and Dwellings 2013. | Range: 2% to 5% (varies by population group). | This variable captures movement out of modified houses, and then subsequent movement into unmodified or modified houses. |
| Level of dwelling cohabitation (impacts on intervention costs). | NZ Census of Population and Dwellings 2013. | Occupancy was higher in CMDHB vs nationally (3.21 vs 2.67 per dwelling). | If two people aged 65+ resided in the same dwelling then this halved the cost of applying the HSAM intervention (on a per participant basis). For targeted interventions, the oldest resident of the pair was the one considered around HSAM intervention eligibility. |
| Annual probability of injurious fall (%) for CMDHB by age-group, sex and ethnicity. | Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC) claims registry data provided to BODE3 (including falls that only involve treatment in primary care) | 15.5% overall (6461/41,736) for 2011. | The claims data should be relatively robust for all injuries requiring treatment in NZ as the health system is highly motivated to make claims to ACC since this ensures payment by ACC. The CMDHB data were adjusted by national level data to provide low and high risk group distributions (the latter if having had treatment for an injurious fall in the previous five years). In scenario analysis the HSAM intervention was targeted by risk level (and also by age-group). |
| Probability of hospitalization after an injurious fall (%) for CMDHB | ACC claims registry data provided to BODE3. | 3.3% overall (1364/41,736) for 2011. | As above, the claims data should be relatively robust for all injuries requiring hospitalization in NZ as ACC pays DHBs for the costs of treatment. |
| Probability of death after an injurious fall (%) (national data). | ACC claims registry data provided to BODE3. | Range: 0% to 5% (highest in Māori men aged 65–69). | |
| Morbidity from falls (disability weights) used to determine QALY loss. | Based on Global Burden of Disease (GBD) data [ | Disability weight = 0.10 (annualized). | |
| All-cause mortality rates | SNZ mortality rates by age, sex and ethnicity (national level data) | – | |
| Total morbidity per capita in 2011 | The per capita rate of years of life lived with disability (YLD) from the NZ Burden of Disease Study by age, sex and ethnicity (national level) [ | – | |
| Assumed effectiveness of HSAM | Cochrane systematic review of interventions for preventing falls in older people [ | 19% reduction in the rate of injurious falls | Since evidence on the effectiveness of HSAM on |
| Intervention uptake in CMDHB | A NZ-based RCT of HSAM [ | 89.0% uptake (as per the RCT at 842/946 households participating) | |
| Program running costs for CMDHB | Informed by a NZ pilot cancer screening program cost data [ | $1,836,384 | The program was assumed to run like a screening program where participants are “screened” for their agreement to participate (have their home modified). That is each person aged 65+ is sent a letter by DHB staff and there is a follow-up phone call (to determine participation and if so to arrange a time for the HSAM). The invitation cost from the pilot screening program data was $44 per participant which was multiplied by the DHB eligible population aged 65+ to give the total program cost ($44 x 41,736 = $1,836,384). The targeted interventions in scenario analyses used the same $44 value per person but had different target populations (e.g., for those aged 75+ with a history of falls). |
| HSAM intervention costs | A NZ-based RCT of HSAM [ | Intervention cost per person $250 | From the RCT we extracted cost data (i.e., labor and material costs) for indoor components of the HSAM in households with one or more members aged 65 years or over. |
| Costs of non-hospital health care after falling (i.e., in primary health care) for CMDHB | ACC claims registry data provided to BODE3. | Average: $344 per case (but varies by age and sex) | |
| Costs of hospitalization after falling for CMDHB | ACC claims registry data provided to BODE3. | Average: $4068 per case (but varies by age and sex) | |
| Annual average population health system costs by age-group and sex (national costs) | HealthTracker [ | Range for not in the last 6 months of life: $3378 in women aged 65-69y, to $6511 in men aged 85-89y. Range in the last 6 months of life: $6127 in women aged 95-99y to $20,476 in women aged 65-69y. | |
Main results and scenario analyses for the home safety assessment and modification intervention (HSAM) in a single health district (Counties Manukau District Health Board).
| Intervention/Output | Output | Baseline (no HSAM) | Impact of HSAM compared to baseline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Net cost (NZ$; 1000s) | Mean | $3,040,000 | $8440 |
| 95%UI | ($3,010,000 –$3,110,000) | ($663 –$14,300) | |
| QALYs gained | Mean | 331,000 | 2800 |
| 95%UI | (321,000–342,000) | (547–5280) | |
| ICER | Mean | Not applicable (NA) | $5480 |
| Median | NA | $3310 | |
| 95%UI | NA | (cost saving–$15,300) | |
| Net cost ($; 1000s) | Mean | $3,040,000 | $91 |
| 95%UI | ($3,010,000 –$3,110,000) | (cost saving–$2140) | |
| QALYs gained | Mean | 331,000 | 1420 |
| 95%UI | (321,000–342,000) | (258–2760) | |
| ICER | Mean | NA | $701 |
| Median | NA | $331 | |
| 95%UI | NA | (cost saving–$2740) | |
| Net cost ($; 1000s) | Mean | $3,040,000 | $8340 |
| 95%UI | ($3,010,000 –$3,110,000) | ($3770 –$12,800) | |
| QALYs gained | Mean | 331,000 | 1520 |
| 95%UI | (321,000–342,000) | (292–2940) | |
| ICER | Mean | NA | $9600 |
| Median | NA | $5790 | |
| 95%UI | NA | ($1410 –$26,300) | |
| Net cost ($; 1000s) | Mean | $963,000 | $2430 |
| 95%UI | ($951,000 –$987,000) | (cost saving–$4830) | |
| QALYs gained | Mean | 85,700 | 592 |
| 95%UI | (83,800–87,800) | (116–1120) | |
| ICER | Mean | NA | $8490 |
| Median | NA | $4620 | |
| 95%UI | NA | (cost saving–$24,500) | |
| Net cost ($; 1000s) | Mean | $963,000 | $-163 |
| 95%UI | ($951,000 –$987,000) | (cost saving–$484) | |
| QALYs gained | Mean | 85,700 | 281 |
| 95%UI | (83,800–87,800) | (52–546) | |
| ICER | Mean | NA | $832 |
| Median | NA | $-87 | |
| 95%UI | NA | (cost saving–$4604) | |
| Net cost ($; 1000s) | Mean | $963,000 | $2540 |
| 95%UI | ($951,000 –$987,000) | ($282 –$4420) | |
| QALYs gained | Mean | 85,700 | 338 |
| 95%UI | (83,800–87,800) | (64–648) | |
| ICER | Mean | NA | $14,260 |
| Median | NA | $8020 | |
| 95%UI | NA | ($206 –$40,200) | |
| Net cost ($; 1000s) | Mean | $4,070,000 | $14,000 |
| 95%UI | ($4,050,000 –$4,130,000) | ($7160 –$21,200) | |
| QALYs gained | Mean | 427,000 | 4160 |
| 95%UI | (412,000–444,000) | (813–7860) | |
| ICER | Mean | NA | $5030 |
| Median | NA | $3560 | |
| 95%UI | NA | ($1170 –$11,600) | |
| Net cost ($; 1000s) | Mean | $2,390,000 | $6110 |
| 95%UI | ($2,360,000 –$2,460,000) | (cost saving–$12,300) | |
| QALYs gained | Mean | 270,000 | 2010 |
| 95%UI | (262,000–277,000) | (392–3830) | |
| ICER | Mean | NA | $6440 |
| Median | NA | $3420 | |
| 95%UI | NA | (cost saving–$20,100) | |
| Net cost ($; 1000s) | Mean | $3,040,000 | $9430 |
| 95%UI | ($3,014,000 –$3,110,000) | ($5600 –$13,000) | |
| QALYs gained | Mean | 331,000 | 1230 |
| 95%UI | (321,000–342,000) | (222–2470) | |
| ICER | Mean | NA | $12,900 |
| Median | NA | $8100 | |
| 95%UI | NA | ($2600 –$38,900) | |
| Net cost ($; 1000s) | Mean | $3,040,000 | $5860 |
| 95%UI | ($3,010,000 –$3,110,000) | (cost saving–$10,900) | |
| QALYs gained | Mean | 331,000 | 2800 |
| 95%UI | (321,000–342,000) | (547–5280) | |
| ICER | Mean | NA | $3920 |
| Median | NA | $2390 | |
| 95%UI | NA | (cost saving–$11,600) | |
| Net cost ($; 1000s) | Mean | $2,050,000 | $3290 |
| 95%UI | ($2,014,000 –$2,120,000) | (cost saving–$10,600) | |
| QALYs gained | Mean | 247,000 | 1380 |
| 95%UI | (241,000–252,000) | (264–2760) | |
| ICER | Mean | NA | $7220 |
| Median | NA | $2940 | |
| 95%UI | NA | (cost saving–$29,700) | |
| Net cost ($; 1000s) | Mean | $2,830,000 | $4950 |
| 95%UI | ($2,790,000 –$2,910,000) | (cost saving–$11,800) | |
| QALYs gained | Mean | 315,0000 | 2360 |
| 95%UI | (306,000–324,000) | (466–4540) | |
| ICER | Mean | NA | $4980 |
| Median | NA | $2470 | |
| 95%UI | NA | (cost saving–$17,200) | |
Note
*Results are rounded to three meaningful digits.
ICER: incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; QALY: quality-adjusted life-year; 95%UI: 95% uncertainty interval.
Analyses by ethnicity and sex within the base-case model for the home safety assessment and modification (HSAM) intervention in the Counties Manukau District Health Board (95%UI).
| Population group | Baseline (no HSAM) | HSAM compared to baseline (incremental) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net cost ($; 1000s) | QALYs expected | QALYs expected per capita | Net cost ($; 1000s) | QALYs gained | QALYs gained per capita | ICER | |
| Total population | $3,040,000 | 331,000 | 7.94 | $8440 | 2800 | 0.066 | $5480 |
| Māori (Indigenous population) | $173,000 | 17,100 | 6.61 | $900 | 158 | 0.061 | $8360 |
| Māori: equity analysis | $196,000 | 22,700 | 8.75 | $1140 | 240 | 0.092 | $6540 |
| Non-Māori | $2,870,000 | 314,000 | 8.031 | $7540 | 2640 | 0.067 | $5310 |
| Men | $1,460,000 | 147,000 | 7.65 | $4020 | 1330 | 0.068 | $5460 |
| Men: equity analysis | $1,600,000 | 163,000 | 8.45 | $4770 | 1580 | 0.082 | $5070 |
| Women | $1,580,000 | 184,000 | 8.20 | $4420 | 1470 | 0.065 | $5520 |
Notes
* Results are rounded to three meaningful digits.
**As Māori have higher background mortality rates and higher morbidity, this essentially ‘penalises’ health gain for Māori in the standard analyses. So we present an equity analysis [21] with non-Māori morbidity and mortality rates applied to Māori (i.e., expanding the envelope of potential health gain for those benefiting from the HSAM intervention).
*** As men have higher background mortality rates, this essentially ‘penalises’ health gain for men in the analyses. So we present an equity analysis with women’s morbidity and mortality rates applied to men.
ICER: incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; QALY: quality-adjusted life-year; 95%UI: 95% uncertainty interval.
Intervention costs by population group offered the home safety assessment and modification (HSAM) intervention (age-group and injurious fall history).
| Population group offered the HSAM intervention | Intervention costs covering the program administration costs and HSAM costs in NZ$ (95% uncertainty interval) |
|---|---|
| People aged 65+ years | $9.57 million [m] ($6.40m –$13.3m) |
| “At risk” people aged 65+ years with one or more previous injurious falls | $864,000 ($384,000 –$1.48m) |
| People aged 65+ years but with no history of previous injurious falls | $8.70m ($5.84m –$12.1m) |
| People aged 75+ years | $3.67m ($2.46m –$5.09m) |
| “At risk” people aged 75+ years with one or more previous injurious falls | $416,000 ($185,000 –$711,000) |
| People aged 75+ years but with no history of previous injurious falls | $3.26m ($2.18m –$4.54m) |