Cost-Effectiveness of In-House Versus Contracted-Out Vision Rehabilitation Services in England
Autor: | Yvonne Birks, Helen Weatherly, Pedro Saramago, Ada Keding, Francesco Longo, Parvaneh Rabiee, Illary Sbizzera |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
economic evaluation
Cost effectiveness media_common.quotation_subject Applied psychology care-related quality of life Social Sciences Context (language use) vision rehabilitation HV Social pathology. Social and public welfare. Criminology Quality of life (healthcare) Health care Vision rehabilitation media_common Selection bias business.industry social care health care Economic evaluation RA Public aspects of medicine quality-adjusted life years (qaly) Medicine Observational study business Psychology |
Zdroj: | Journal of Long-Term Care, Vol 0, Iss 2020 (2020) |
ISSN: | 2516-9122 |
Popis: | Context: Vision rehabilitation (VR) services in England promote users’ health and wellbeing, and support all aspects of daily living through two dominant models: in-house and contracted-out VR services. The two models differ in terms of service delivery, but they share a common aim to enhance service users’ quality of life and reduce utilisation of social and health care services.Objective: This study investigated the cost-effectiveness of in-house versus contracted-out VR services.Methods: The analysis was performed from a social care perspective and a social and health care perspective. The analyses used data from a six-month follow-up observational study of VR users. Regression analysis was used to estimate differential outcomes and costs, taking user and local authority characteristics into account.Findings: At a cost-effectiveness threshold of £13,000 and £30,000 per QALY, in-house VR services have a high probability (greater than 90% vs. contracted-out VR services) of being cost-effective from a social care perspective. In-house VR services have a lower probability (lower than 25% vs. contracted-out VR services) of being cost-effective from a social and health care perspective.Limitations: Observational studies are prone to selection bias compared to randomised controlled trials due to confounding. We employed econometric techniques that control for several user and LA characteristics to reduce potential bias.Implications: Contracted-out VR services may be better value for money compared to in-house VR services in the context of integrated social and health care due to substantial healthcare resource savings. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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