| Literature DB >> 29514676 |
Stephen A Stanhope1, Mary C Cooley2, Linda F Ellington3, Gregory P Gadbois2, Andrew L Richardson3, Timothy C Zeddes4, Jay P LaBine5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the United States, home-based primary care (HBPC) is increasingly proposed as a means of enabling frail elders to remain at home for as long as possible, while still receiving needed medical care. However, there are relatively few studies of either the medical outcome effects or cost benefits of HBPC. In this paper, we examine medical cost and mortality outcomes for enrollees in the HBPC program offered by Spectrum Health/Priority Health (SH/PH), a not-for-profit integrated health care/health insurance system located in Grand Rapids, MI, USA.Entities:
Keywords: Home based primary care; Medical costs; Survival
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29514676 PMCID: PMC5842568 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-018-2965-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Treatment and matched control characteristics
| Characteristic | Treats. ( | Controls (n = 210) |
|---|---|---|
| % Female | 61 | 54 |
| Median age | 79 | 77 |
| Mean 4 month pre-enrollment total medical cost | $13,075 | $13,001 |
| Mean 4 month pre-enrollment RX cost | $1452 | $1484 |
| Mean 4 month pre-enrollment IP cost | $6200 | $6955 |
| Mean 4 month pre-enrollment OP cost | $2701 | $1895 |
| % with 4 month pre-enrollment IP stays | 40.0 | 40.0 |
| % with 4 month pre-enrollment SNF stays | 14.8 | 14.8 |
| % with Alzheimer’s disease or chronic mental illness | 36.2 | 36.2 |
| % with coronary heart disease | 68.6 | 68.6 |
| % with cerebrovascular disease | 33.3 | 33.3 |
| % with congestive heart failure | 31.4 | 31.4 |
| % with diabetes | 45.2 | 45.2 |
| % with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease | 33.8 | 33.8 |
| % with arthritis | 28.1 | 27.6 |
Table 1 provides demographic, medical cost and utilization, and morbidity patterns of the matched HBPC participant and control samples. The samples demonstrate balance for covariates explicitly matched upon (age; total medical cost; Alzheimer’s disease or CMI; CHD; CVD; CHF; diabetes; COPD) as well as those not (sex; RX, IP and OP costs; arthritis)
Medicare allowed costs during follow-up – overall HBPC participants/matched controls
|
| Total cost | RX cost (% total) | IP cost (% total) | OP cost (% total) | Savings, 95% CI, | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12 months | HBPC | 210 | $28,621 | $4937 (17.24%) | $9783 (34.18%) | $7462 (26.07%) | ($2933) |
| Ctrl | 210 | $25,688 | $4677 (18.21%) | $10,573 (41.15%) | $4576 (17.81%) | ||
| 24 months | HBPC | 210 | $39,738 | $6798 (17.11%) | $12,558 (31.60%) | $11,003 (27.69%) | $8620 |
| Ctrl | 210 | $48,358 | $8600 (17.78%) | $19,859 (41.06%) | $8422 (17.41%) |
Table 2 provides patterns of medical costs and savings for the matched HBPC participant and control samples at 12 and 24 months. HBPC participants show greater expenditure than matched controls at 12 months. At 24 months, this has reversed, and HBPC participants show medical cost savings driven primarily by reductions in in-patient costs
Medicare allowed costs during follow-up – participants and controls matched for mortality
|
| Total cost | RX cost (% total) | IP cost (% total) | OP cost (% total) | Savings, 95% CI, | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12 months |
| HBPC | 176 | $28,373 | $5394 (19.01%) | $9272 (32.68%) | $7041 (24.82%) | ($5866) |
| Ctrl | 176 | $22,507 | $4833 (21.69%) | $8358 (37.13%) | $3960 (17.59%) | |||
|
| HBPC | 20 | $21,273 | $1847 (8.68%) | $10,138 (47.66%) | $5373 (25.25%) | $37,037 | |
| Ctrl | 20 | $58,310 | $4174 (7.16%) | $38,119 (65.37%) | $4253 (7.29%) | |||
| 24 months |
| HBPC | 161 | $41,716 | $6219 (14.91%) | $13,381 (32.08%) | $12,398 (29.72%) | $726 |
| Ctrl | 161 | $42,442 | $8832 (20.81%) | $14,193 (33.44%) | $8815 (20.77%) | |||
|
| HBPC | 31 | $28,116 | $2154 (7.66%) | $12,516 (44.51%) | $7907 (28.12%) | $27,610 | |
| Ctrl | 31 | $55,726 | $4214 (7.56%) | $30,732 (55.14%) | $8800 (15.79%) |
Table 3 provides patterns of medical costs and savings for matched (conditional on mortality status) HBPC participant and control samples at 12 and 24 months. HBPC participants show substantial savings at end of life relative to controls, driven strongly by reductions in in-patient costs. Prior to end of life, HBPC participants are more expensive initially, and cost neutral after the first 12 months of enrollment
Average monthly costs of long-term HBPC participants and matched controls prior to end of life
| N | Months 1–12 | Months 13–24 | Months 1–24 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HBPC | 58 | $2278 | $2428 | $2367 |
| Control | 58 | $1671 | $2543 | $2106 |
| Difference, | ($607) | $115 | ($261) |
Table 4 examines the monthly medical costs of uncensored (at 24 months), surviving HBPC participants relative to controls. Consistent with Table 3, the medical costs of HBPC participants are initially greater and long term equivalent to controls
Mortality rates for HBPC cases, matched controls
| Deaths | Mortality rate | Relative risk, | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12 months | HBPC | 31 | 15% | 1.56 |
| Control | 21 | 10% | ||
| 24 months | HBPC | 42 | 20% | 1.21 |
| Control | 36 | 17% |
Table 5 provides mortality rates and relative risks of HBPC participants relative to controls. HBPC participants show slightly but insignificantly greater mortality rates, likely due to unmatched criteria used to select HBPC participants