| Literature DB >> 35047708 |
Laura T Pizzi1, Eric Jutkowitz2,3, Katherine M Prioli1, Ember Yiwei Lu1, Zachary Babcock4, Heather McAbee-Sevick5, Dorothy B Wakefield5, Julie Robison5, Sheila Molony6, Catherine V Piersol7, Laura N Gitlin8, Richard H Fortinsky5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: There is a critical need for effective interventions to support quality of life for persons living with dementia and their caregivers. Growing evidence supports nonpharmacologic programs that provide care management, disease education, skills training, and support. This cost-benefit analysis examined whether the Care of Persons with Dementia in their Environments (COPE) program achieves cost savings when incorporated into Connecticut's home- and community-based services (HCBS), which are state- and Medicaid-funded. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Findings are based on a pragmatic trial where persons living with dementia and their caregiver dyads were randomly assigned to COPE with HCBS, or HCBS alone. Cost measures included those relevant to HCBS decision makers: intervention delivery, health care utilization, caregiver time, formal care, and social services. Data sources included care management records and caregiver report.Entities:
Keywords: Health care policy; Health economics; Home- and community-based services; Medicaid/Medicare; Pragmatic trial
Year: 2021 PMID: 35047708 PMCID: PMC8763605 DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igab042
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Innov Aging ISSN: 2399-5300
Cost Sample Demographics, Overall and by Group
| Characteristic | Overall | COPE | Usual Care |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CHCPE category | .957 | |||
| 1 | 3 (1.2%) | 2 (1.5%) | 1 (0.8%) | |
| 2 | 75 (30.0%) | 38 (29.2%) | 37 (30.8%) | |
| 3 | 172 (68.8%) | 90 (69.2%) | 82 (68.3%) | |
| Caregiver age, mean ( | 62.5 (10.92) | 62.1 (11.25) | 63.0 (10.58) | .4889 |
| Person living with dementia age, mean ( | 85.2 (7.92) | 85.1 (8.31) | 85.4 (7.50) | .7412 |
| Caregiver gender |
| |||
| Female | 179 (71.6%) | 103 (79.2%) | 76 (63.3%) | |
| Male | 71 (28.4%) | 27 (20.8%) | 44 (36.7%) | |
| Person living with dementia gender | .4597 | |||
| Female | 190 (76.0%) | 96 (73.8%) | 94 (78.3%) | |
| Male | 60 (24.0%) | 34 (26.2%) | 26 (21.7%) | |
| Caregiver race | .4618 | |||
| White, Caucasian | 189 (75.6%) | 95 (73.1%) | 94 (78.3%) | |
| Black, African-American | 46 (18.4%) | 27 (20.8%) | 19 (15.8%) | |
| Other | 12 (4.8%) | 6 (4.6%) | 6 (5.0%) | |
| Native American or Alaska native | 2 (0.8%) | 2 (1.5%) | 0 (0.0%) | |
| Unknown/no response | 1 (0.4%) | 0 (0.0%) | 1 (0.8%) | |
| Person living with dementia race | .7543 | |||
| White, Caucasian | 192 (76.8%) | 98 (75.4%) | 94 (78.3%) | |
| Black, African-American | 44 (17.6%) | 25 (19.2%) | 19 (15.8%) | |
| Other | 13 (5.2%) | 7 (5.4%) | 6 (5.0%) | |
| Native American or Alaska native | 1 (0.4%) | 0 (0.0%) | 1 (0.8%) | |
| Unknown/no response | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | |
| Caregiver highest education attained | .1909 | |||
| College/postgraduate | 116 (46.4%) | 66 (50.8%) | 50 (41.7%) | |
| HS or less | 72 (28.8%) | 31 (23.8%) | 41 (34.2%) | |
| Some college | 61 (24.4%) | 32 (24.6%) | 29 (24.2%) | |
| Unknown/no response | 1 (0.4%) | 1 (0.8%) | 0 (0.0%) | |
| Person living with dementia highest education attained | .6108 | |||
| HS graduate | 139 (55.6%) | 73 (56.2%) | 66 (55.0%) | |
| Less than HS | 71 (28.4%) | 34 (26.2%) | 37 (30.8%) | |
| College/postgraduate | 40 (16.0%) | 23 (17.7%) | 17 (14.2%) | |
| Caregiver employment status | .5996 | |||
| Not working | 120 (48.0%) | 64 (49.2%) | 56 (46.7%) | |
| Full time (>35 h/week) | 99 (39.6%) | 48 (36.9%) | 51 (42.5%) | |
| Part-time (<35 h/week) | 31 (12.4%) | 18 (13.8%) | 13 (10.8%) | |
| Caregiver difficulty paying for the basics | .3392 | |||
| Not difficult at all | 116 (46.4%) | 67 (51.5%) | 49 (40.8%) | |
| Somewhat difficult | 67 (26.8%) | 33 (25.4%) | 34 (28.3%) | |
| Not very difficult | 45 (18.0%) | 20 (15.4%) | 25 (20.8%) | |
| Very difficult | 21 (8.4%) | 9 (6.9%) | 12 (10.0%) | |
| Unknown/no response | 1 (0.4%) | 1 (0.8%) | 0 (0.0%) | |
| Caregiver marital status | .5830 | |||
| Married or living as married | 147 (58.8%) | 74 (56.9%) | 73 (60.8%) | |
| Divorced/separated | 44 (17.6%) | 24 (18.5%) | 20 (16.7%) | |
| Never married | 42 (16.8%) | 25 (19.2%) | 17 (14.2%) | |
| Widowed, not currently married | 17 (6.8%) | 7 (5.4%) | 10 (8.3%) | |
| Caregiver relationship to person living with dementia | .1268 | |||
| Daughter | 140 (56.0%) | 78 (60.0%) | 62 (51.7%) | |
| Spouse | 44 (17.6%) | 23 (17.7%) | 21 (17.5%) | |
| Son | 40 (16.0%) | 14 (10.8%) | 26 (21.7%) | |
| Other | 26 (10.4%) | 15 (11.5%) | 11 (9.2%) | |
| Caregiver and person living with dementia living arrangement | .8987 | |||
| Live together | 143 (57.2%) | 75 (57.7%) | 68 (56.7%) | |
| Live apart | 107 (42.8%) | 55 (42.3%) | 52 (43.3%) |
Notes: CHCPE = Connecticut Home Care Program for Elders; COPE = Care of Persons with Dementia in their Environments; HS = high school.
Statistics presented: mean (SD) or n (%).
Statistical tests performed: two-sided t test and Fisher’s exact test. All tests were performed at the alpha = 0.05 level.
Mean per-Dyad Direct and Indirect Costs for the COPE Intervention vs Usual Care
| Cost Type | COPE Intervention ( | Usual Care Control ( | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BL | M12 | M12–BL | BL | M12 | M12–BL | DID (95% CI) |
| |
|
| ||||||||
| Formal staff training | 0.00 | 218.75 | 218.75 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 218.75 | — |
| Screening for program eligibility | 0.00 | 3.87 | 3.87 | 0.00 | 3.87 | 3.87 | 0.00 | — |
| OT/APN time with client | 0.00 | 677.48 | 677.48 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 677.48 | — |
| OT/APN work outside of intervention | 0.00 | 59.79 | 59.79 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 59.79 | — |
| Travel time to participant homes | 0.00 | 402.79 | 402.79 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 402.79 | — |
| Mileage for travel to participant homes | 0.00 | 170.63 | 170.63 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 170.63 | — |
| Interventionist debriefing | 0.00 | 177.43 | 177.43 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 177.43 | — |
| Activity supplies and assessment materials | 0.00 | 60.34 | 60.34 | 0.00 | 0.14 | 0.14 | 60.21 | — |
| Laboratory testing | 0.00 | 340.97 | 340.97 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 340.97 | — |
| Care plan | 1 362 | 1 297 | −64.91 | 1 277 | 1 274 | −3.70 | −61.21 (−172.98 to 50.54) | .70 |
| Subtotal | 2 047 | 0.30 | 2 047 | .70 | ||||
|
| ||||||||
| Nursing home stays | 3 023 | 6 695 | 3 672 | 1 334 | 6 668 | 5 334 | −1 662 (−6 258 to 2 934) | .47 |
| Respite care | 98.05 | 74.71 | −23.34 | 37.94 | 25.30 | −12.64 | −10.70 (−243.91 to 215.43 | .37 |
| Inpatient hospitalizations | 6 548 | 6 077 | −470.94 | 6 091 | 8 345 | 2 254 | −2 725 (−6 246 to 795.25) | .12 |
| ED visits | 4 829 | 4 089 | −739.76 | 4 104 | 6 261 | 2 157 | −2 897 (−5 771 to −23.55) | .08 |
| Outpatient visits | 239.96 | 1 731 | 1 491 | 255.08 | 1 880 | 1 625 | −133.93 (−1 440 to 326.16) | .38 |
| Medications | 16 827 | 10 407 | −6 420 | 18 192 | 13 240 | −4 952 | −1 467 (−5 745 to 2 810) | .28 |
| Durable medical equipment | 148.97 | 69.59 | −79.38 | 175.68 | 79.56 | −96.12 | 16.74 (−104.18 to 137.66) | .96 |
| Visiting nurse | 45.87 | 23.25 | −22.62 | 32.90 | 28.59 | −4.31 | −18.31 (−31.94 to 2.50) | .10 |
| Home health aide | 411.48 | 341.74 | −67.40 | 456.37 | 355.52 | −100.85 | 31.11 (−63.55 to 78.10) | .43 |
| Subtotal | −2 663 | 6 204 | −8 867 (−18 105 to 370.81) | .04 | ||||
|
| ||||||||
| Social worker | 7.79 | 44.01 | 36.23 | 4.03 | 45.48 | 41.45 | −5.22 (−47.02 to 18.96) | .64 |
| Meals | 56.50 | 36.05 | −20.45 | 39.16 | 31.40 | −7.75 | −12.70 (−26.21 to 27.01) | 1.00 |
| Transportation | 3.36 | 4.01 | 0.65 | 3.63 | 3.94 | 0.31 | 0.34 (−2.28 to 3.80) | .63 |
| Adult day care | 280.37 | 259.11 | −21.26 | 330.19 | 292.64 | −37.55 | 16.28 (−115.74 to 155.44) | .53 |
| Subtotal | −4.84 | −3.55 | −1.29 (−215.62 to 97.02) | 1.00 | ||||
|
| ||||||||
| Supervision/assistance with ADLs and IADLs | 5 094 | 3 361 | −1 733 | 5 256 | 3 368 | −1 888 | 154.32 (−1 210 to 1 391) | .27 |
|
| −1 733 | −1 888 | 154.32 (−1 210 to 1 391) | .27 | ||||
|
| −2 354 | 4 313 | −6 667 (−15 473 to 2 734) | .27 |
Notes: ADL = activities of daily living; APN = advanced practice nurse; BL = baseline; CI = confidence interval; COPE = Care of Persons with Dementia in their Environments; DID = difference-in-difference; ED = emergency department; IADL = instrumental activities of daily living; M12 = month 12; OT = occupational therapist.
Statistical test performed: two-sided Wilcoxon rank-sum test.
Figure 1.Univariate sensitivity analyses of COPE intervention costs.Note: APN = advanced practice nurse; COPE = Care of Persons with Dementia in their Environments; OT = occupational therapist.
Percent of CHCPE Care Plan Funds Utilized by COPE
| CHCPE Category | Care Plan Limits/Month | COPE Cost/Month | COPE + Administration Cost/Month | CM Cost/Month | COPE + Administration Cost/Year + CM/Year | % Consumed by COPE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | $3 143 | $528.01 | $739.22 | $108.10 | $4 254 | 11.28% |
| 3 | $6 286 | $528.01 | $739.22 | $108.10 | $4 254 | 5.64% |
Note: CHCPE = Connecticut Home Care Program for Elders; COPE = Care of Persons with Dementia in their Environments; CM = care management.