| Literature DB >> 33074157 |
Centaine L Snoswell1,2, Monica L Taylor1,2, Tracy A Comans2, Anthony C Smith1,2,3, Leonard C Gray2, Liam J Caffery1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Telehealth represents an opportunity for Australia to harness the power of technology to redesign the way health care is delivered. The potential benefits of telehealth include increased accessibility to care, productivity gains for health providers and patients through reduced travel, potential for cost savings, and an opportunity to develop culturally appropriate services that are more sensitive to the needs of special populations. The uptake of telehealth has been hindered at times by clinician reluctance and policies that preclude metropolitan populations from accessing telehealth services.Entities:
Keywords: cost-benefit analysis; review; telemedicine
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33074157 PMCID: PMC7605980 DOI: 10.2196/17298
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1Scoping review methods.
Description of cost analysis types.
| Method | Description |
| CMAa [ | CMA requires either proof or a stated assumption that the two comparators are equally effective, and therefore, the analysis only examines the difference in cost between the comparators. When comparing CMA, it is important to examine the items included for costing for each comparator as well as the final reported result. |
| CEAb [ | CEA quantifies both the costs and a measurable effect (eg, blood pressure in mm Hg or days to diagnosis) from the comparators and presents them as a cost per increment of effectiveness. Due to the variety in measured effects, CEA are not easily comparable unless they use the same measure for effectiveness. |
| CUAc | CUA uses measures of cost and health-related quality of life (often expressed as a utility value) to compare interventions with usual care. Although more comparable, it is important to examine not only the cost estimations but also the method of eliciting health-related quality of life within each study. |
aCMA: cost-minimization analysis.
bCEA: cost-effectiveness analysis.
cCUA: cost-utility analysis.
Figure 2Proportion of studies identified that saved costs. CEA: cost-effectiveness analysis; CMA: cost-minimization analysis; CUA: cost-utility analysis.
Cost-minimization analysis demonstrating lower costs for telehealth from the perspective of the health system.
| Reference | Telehealth modality and clinical focus | CHEERSa score (out of 20) | Findings in US $ 2019 | Initial investment in US $ 2019 | Reason for lower cost in the telehealth group |
| Kovács et al (2017) [ | Store-and-forward system for screening for retinopathy of prematurity | 18 | Cost per examination for telehealth was less than in-person examination. | $199,959.03 including equipment and implementation costs | Saved patient transport costs; saved working hours |
| Buysse et al (2008) [ | Remote monitoring for high-risk pregnancy replacing extended hospital admissions | 14 | Cost reduction for remote monitoring of $233,958 per year. | $15,409.17 | Saved admitted days. If an average of 8 patients were suitable for and accepted remote monitoring each month, an average of 14.7 admitted days could be replaced by remote monitoring |
| Xu et al (2008) [ | Videoconference for ear, nose and throat consultations | 19 | Costs of $108 per consultation for telehealth versus $155 for in-person consultation when caseload >100 consultations per year; saving realized despite a patient-end pediatrician cost to telehealth. | $31,509.38 | Saved patient and family travel |
| Armstrong et al (2007) [ | Store-and-forward system for dermatology screening, diagnosis, and triage | 15 | Teledermatology practice had an hourly operating cost of $361 versus $456 for conventional care | Not reported | When the patient-end is in a rural area (cheaper to rent space in those clinics) |
| Smith et al (2007) [ | Pediatric videoconference service for consultation reducing travel requirements | 17 | At caseload >774 cases/5 years telehealth is cost savings compared with in-person; $598,203 saved over 5 years. | Not reported | Saved patient transport costs |
| Pare et al (2006) [ | Remote monitoring for patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder by nurses, in place of regular home visits | 13 | Telehealth realizes $361 in savings per patient or $8566 total service cost savings compared with traditional in-home care program over 6-months (~$13,713 per annum). | $24,609.38 | Reduced home visits by nurses (saved travel) and reduced salary for home-visit nurses (increased productivity) and reduced hospitalizations (secondary care usage) |
| Labiris et al (2005) [ | Multispecialty videoconference consultations service (mainly orthopedics and dermatology) in place of in-person consultations | 13 | Cost per consultation for telehealth $327 versus $333 for conventional care. | $34,356.78 | Saved transportation costs |
| Norum et al (2005) [ | Hybrid system for radiotherapy involving store-and-forward simulation planning and remote oncologist supervision via videoconference | 15 | At workload >9-12 patients, telehealth is less expensive when patient transport by air is required. | $112,115.99 | Avoided emergency transfers |
| Scuffham et al (2002) [ | Generalist dentist videoconference with specialist dentists from a metropolitan center reducing the need for travel by patients or specialists | 19 | Teledentistry ($233) is more expensive compared with outreach ($156) but less expensive when compared in-person care ($662) per patient treated. | Not reported | Saved patient travel costs/subsidy |
| Bjørvig et al (2002) [ | Store-and-forward system for diabetic retinopathy screening | 17 | At caseloads of >110, telehealth is cost saving. At workloads <110, telehealth is more expensive than conventional care; at very low workloads (n=20), telehealth is around 20 times more expensive than conventional care per consultation; at high workloads (n=200), telehealth costs around 67% of conventional care per consultation. | Not reported | Saved patient travel |
| Harno et al (2001) [ | Review and triage of orthopedic cases via videoconference | 12 | Telehealth was $3954 (total service cost) less expensive than the traditional referral model. | Not reported | Triage by VCb decreased the number of in-person hospital visits |
| Bergmo et al (2000) [ | Store-and-forward system for dermatology screening, diagnosis, and triage | 16 | At caseload >195 patients per year, telehealth ($96,042.79) costs less than hybrid outreach/patient travel service as a whole ($179,634.98), patient travel ($333,568.03) or locally employed dermatologists ($81,355.24); actual workload was 375 patients. | $81355.24 | Saved patient and/or clinician travel |
| Harno et al (2000) [ | Triage of specialist cases via email and/or videoconference | 13 | Telehealth is less expensive with saving of $10,874 over 8 months for the service. | Not reported | Triage by email and/or VC decreased the number of hospital visits |
| McCue et al (1998) [ | Review and triage of specialist cases (HIV, cardiology, and oral surgery) by videoconference | 13 | Net saving of $22 per consultation using telemedicine. | Not reported | Main saving is from saved transport |
| McCue et al (1997) [ | Review and triage of specialist cases (HIV, cardiology, and oral surgery) by videoconference | 11 | Telehealth was cost saving realizing total service cost saving of $24,352 over the 7-month study period (~$21,700 per annum) or cost per visit for telehealth ($430) versus conventional care ($835). | $251,995.49 | Transport savings and medical cost savings |
aCHEERS: Consolidated Health Economic Evaluation Reporting Standards.
bVC: video consultation.
Figure 3Cost-effectiveness studies mapped on cost-effectiveness plane.
Summary of cost-effectiveness studies that demonstrated lower health system costs in the telehealth model.
| Reference | Telehealth modality and clinical focus | CHEERSa score | Effect measure | Effect improvement with telehealth? | Reason for lower cost in the telehealth group | Payback period |
| Chen et al (2013) [ | Remote biometric monitoring of patients with cardiovascular disease; out-of-range values trigger contact via phone from the clinical unit. | 13 | Hospital event rate | Yes | Reduced hospitalization, length of stay, and general medical costs to the health system when compared with similar patients without clinical monitoring and support. | Not calculable |
| Ho et al (2014) [ | Remote biometric monitoring of patients with cardiovascular disease; out-of-range values trigger contact via phone from the clinical unit. | 21 | Hospital event rate | Yes | Reduced hospitalization, length of stay, and general medical costs to the health system when compared with similar patients without clinical monitoring and support. | <1 year; however, due to the ongoing cost of remote monitoring, savings would need to continue at the same rate. |
| Fusco et al (2016) [ | Physiotherapy rehabilitation sessions delivered via videoconference to patients after orthopedic surgery. | 24 | Range of motion for relevant joints | Yes | Cost savings primarily due to reduced need for ambulatory government-funded travel when compared with in-person physiotherapy. | Not calculable |
| Richter et al (2015) [ | Videoconference counselling sessions to support smoking cessation provided by primary care clinics. | 17 | Smoking cessation abstinence at 12 months | Equivalent | Compared with counselling provided over the phone, videoconference sessions were shorter and therefore cost less in staff wages. | Not calculable |
aCHEERS: Consolidated Health Economic Evaluation Reporting Standards.
Figure 4Cost-utility studies mapped on cost-effectiveness plane.
Figure 5Quartile 2 incremental cost-utility values in 2019 US$.
Cost-utility analysis articles demonstrating lower cost from the perspective of the health system.
| Reference | Telehealth modality and clinical focus | CHEERSa score | Cost (telehealth minus usual) | Utility (telehealth minus usual) | Cost (2019 US $) | Health-related quality of life tool | Reason for lower cost in the telehealth group | Payback period |
| Boyne et al (2013) [ | In-home remote patient monitoring by a nurse. Patient’s response to clinical questions aimed at identifying exacerbation of heart failure. | 22 | −31 (US $, 2018) | 0.0031 | −31.71 | EQ5Db | Reduction in in-person appointments and reduction in the use of physiotherapy services. | Not calculable |
| Frederix et al (2016) [ | Remote monitoring for cardiovascular disease. Patients wear an accelerometer and receive feedback on their activity via email or SMS. | 20 | −564.4 (Euro, 2015) | 0.026 | −676.79 | EQ5D | Reduction in rehospitalization costs. | Not calculable |
| Greving et al (2015) [ | Remote monitoring of vascular disease using patient-collected biometric information, with feedback from a remote nurse monitoring their data. | 22 | −219 (Euro, 2009) | 0.01 | −366.54 | EQ5D | Reduction in paramedic support and hospital admissions. | Not calculable |
| Mistry et al (2013) [ | Prenatal screening for congenital heart disease: store-and-forward images and videoconference consultations | 23 | −30 (UK £, 2009-10) | 0.042 | −60.1 | Multiple literature sources | Economies of scale in telehealth screening compared with in-person screening. | Not calculable |
| Nguyen et al (2016) [ | Store-and-forward diabetic retinopathy screening. Images captured by a nurse reviewed off-site, and the report is sent to the doctor. | 20 | −144 (Singapore $, not specified) | 0.0006 | −114.65 | Time trade off | Centralized image examination was lower cost when compared with distributed image examination. Additionally, the triage process reduced unnecessary referrals for appointments and procedures. | Not calculable |
| Thomas et al (2015) [ | Store-and-forward ophthalmic images for glaucoma screening. | 22 | −3569.88 (Can $, 2014) | 0.12 | −3523.28 | Literature sources [ | Reduction in travel and associated costs associated with travel (direct costs and staff time) and staff wages due to shorter appointments. | 1-2 years for one site (saving per patient is $3570 and current annual workload is 300 patients). |
| Zanaboni et al (2013) [ | Remote monitoring of biometric data from an implanted device to identify heart failure exacerbations. | 19 | −888.1 (Euro, 2010) | 0.065 | −1280.46 | EQ-5Db | Substituting in-person clinic visits with lower cost virtual consults, and reduction in the emergency department and urgent clinic visits. | 1-2 years |
| Burns et al (2016) [ | Videoconference speech pathology for rural patients with head and neck cancer. | 17 | −59 (Aus $, 2015) | Equal | −48.94 | Assessment of Quality of Life Instrument (4 dimensions) | Reduction in travel and associated costs and staff wages due to shorter appointments. | 7-8 years for one site (saving per patient is $59 and current annual workload is 82 patients) plus 30 patients on average to cover annual levy. |
aCHEERS: Consolidated Health Economic Evaluation Reporting Standards
bEQ5D: EuroQol five dimensions
Domains identified from expert feedback.
| Domain | Description | Level of evidence [ |
| Productivity gains | Optimization of staff time leading to productivity gains. | Level II-IV |
| Secondary care resource use | There is potential for telehealth to reduce secondary care resource (eg, emergency department presentation, hospitalization, and medical imaging) use with associated costs savings. | Level I-III |
| Alternative funding models | The commercialization of telehealth has resulted in direct-to-consumer models of care where patients pay for their services directly, rather than accessing subsidized care. | Evidence in this emerging field does not map to any NHMRCa levels |
| Telementoring | Telementoring of primary care can increase the skill level of clinicians, thereby reducing future referrals to specialists for similar cases. | Evidence in this emerging field does not map to any NHMRC levels |
aNHMRC: National Health and Medical Research Council.