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Cost-effectiveness of Veterans Administration hospital-based home care. A randomized clinical trial.
103
Citations
18
References
1990
Year
Randomized Clinical TrialHospital MedicinePrimary CarePublic HealthHome CareHealth Services ResearchHealth PolicyRandomized DesignHealth InsuranceOutcomes ResearchFunctional StatusCost EffectivenessHealthcare ValueHealth Care DeliveryNursingPalliative CareHealth EconomicsVeterans AdministrationHealth Care CostMedicinePatient Satisfaction
A randomized design was used to examine the cost-effectiveness of a Veterans Administration hospital-based home care program that case managed inpatient and outpatient care. Patients (N = 419) with two or more functional impairments or a terminal illness were randomized to hospital-based home care (n = 211) or customary care (n = 208). Functional status, satisfaction with care, and morale were measured at baseline and at 1 and 6 months after discharge from the hospital; health care utilization was tracked for 6 months. Findings included significantly higher (0.1 on a three-point scale) patient and caregiver satisfaction with care at 1 month and lower Veterans Administration and private sector hospital costs ($3000 vs $4245) for the experimental group. Net per person health care costs were also 13% lower in the experimental group. We conclude that this model of hospital-based home care is cost-effective and that its expansion to cover these two patient groups throughout the Veterans Administration system can improve patient care at no additional cost.
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