A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of a Peak Flow-Based Asthma Education and Self-Management Plan in a High-Cost Population |
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Authors: | Ma Lourdes B de Asis Richard Greene |
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Institution: |
a Division of Allergy and Immunology, Department of Pediatrics, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Montefiore Medical Center, Bronx, New York, USA
b Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, New Jersey, USA |
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Abstract: | Background. Asthma education and action plans (AP) have been recognized as important components in the optimal management of asthma. Studies have differed on the importance of a peak flow-based self-management plans in reducing health care costs and use due to asthma exacerbation. Objective. To analyze the cost-effectiveness of peak flow-based action plans in reducing costs associated with ER visits and hospitalizations due to acute asthma exacerbation in a population of high-risk and high-cost patients, defined as patients with moderate to severe asthma with a history of recent urgent treatment in the ER or hospitalization due to asthma. Methods. A literature review of randomized clinical trials comparing peak flow-based (PFB) action plans, symptom-based (SB) action plans, and usual care/no action plan (NAP) was performed. Probability values regarding the effectiveness of each alternative (as measured by increase/decrease in ER visits and hospitalizations over a 6-month period) were derived. Incremental cost-effectiveness and cost-benefit ratios were calculated for each alternative. Sensitivity analyses were performed. Results. For high-risk and high-cost asthma patients, our analysis revealed that the most cost-effective alternative for reducing ER visits was a peak flow-based self-management plan. The peak flow-based self-management program had an incremental cost-effectiveness (C/E) ratio of $ 60.57 per ER visit averted compared to usual care/NAP and a C/E ratio of $31.46 compared to the SB-AP. The PFB-AP was also the most cost-effective in reducing asthma hospitalization costs with an incremental C/E ratio of $300 per hospitalization prevented, compared with usual care and a C/E ratio of $311, compared to a SB-AP. Analysis yielded a cost-benefit ratio of 13.79 for the PFB-AP compared to NAP; the SB-AP had a cost-benefit ratio of 11.53 compared to NAP. Conclusion. Cost-effectiveness and cost-benefit analyses reveal that for high-cost patients, a peak flow-based asthma education and self-management plan program is the most cost-effective alternative in reducing costs associated with ER visits and hospitalizations due to asthma exacerbation. Further refinements to this cost-effectiveness analysis including measuring changes in drug use and costs and patients' productivity losses need to be pursued and may demonstrate additional cost-savings due to peak flow-based asthma education plans. |
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Keywords: | Asthma High-cost population Cost-benefit analysis Cost-effectiveness analysis Peak flow-based action plan Self-management action plan Symptom-based action plan |
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