Peninsula College of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK.
Health Technol Assess. 2011 Dec;15(44):i-xii, 1-254. doi: 10.3310/hta15440.
Exercise referral schemes (ERS) aim to identify inactive adults in the primary-care setting. The GP or health-care professional then refers the patient to a third-party service, with this service taking responsibility for prescribing and monitoring an exercise programme tailored to the needs of the individual.
To assess the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of ERS for people with a diagnosed medical condition known to benefit from physical activity (PA). The scope of this report was broadened to consider individuals without a diagnosed condition who are sedentary.
MEDLINE; EMBASE; PsycINFO; The Cochrane Library, ISI Web of Science; SPORTDiscus and ongoing trial registries were searched (from 1990 to October 2009) and included study references were checked.
Systematic reviews: the effectiveness of ERS, predictors of ERS uptake and adherence, and the cost-effectiveness of ERS; and the development of a decision-analytic economic model to assess cost-effectiveness of ERS.
Seven randomised controlled trials (UK, n = 5; non-UK, n = 2) met the effectiveness inclusion criteria, five comparing ERS with usual care, two compared ERS with an alternative PA intervention, and one to an ERS plus a self-determination theory (SDT) intervention. In intention-to-treat analysis, compared with usual care, there was weak evidence of an increase in the number of ERS participants who achieved a self-reported 90-150 minutes of at least moderate-intensity PA per week at 6-12 months' follow-up [pooled relative risk (RR) 1.11, 95% confidence interval 0.99 to 1.25]. There was no consistent evidence of a difference between ERS and usual care in the duration of moderate/vigorous intensity and total PA or other outcomes, for example physical fitness, serum lipids, health-related quality of life (HRQoL). There was no between-group difference in outcomes between ERS and alternative PA interventions or ERS plus a SDT intervention. None of the included trials separately reported outcomes in individuals with medical diagnoses. Fourteen observational studies and five randomised controlled trials provided a numerical assessment of ERS uptake and adherence (UK, n = 16; non-UK, n = 3). Women and older people were more likely to take up ERS but women, when compared with men, were less likely to adhere. The four previous economic evaluations identified suggest ERS to be a cost-effective intervention. Indicative incremental cost per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) estimates for ERS for various scenarios were based on a de novo model-based economic evaluation. Compared with usual care, the mean incremental cost for ERS was £169 and the mean incremental QALY was 0.008, with the base-case incremental cost-effectiveness ratio at £20,876 per QALY in sedentary people without a medical condition and a cost per QALY of £14,618 in sedentary obese individuals, £12,834 in sedentary hypertensive patients, and £8414 for sedentary individuals with depression. Estimates of cost-effectiveness were highly sensitive to plausible variations in the RR for change in PA and cost of ERS.
We found very limited evidence of the effectiveness of ERS. The estimates of the cost-effectiveness of ERS are based on a simple analytical framework. The economic evaluation reports small differences in costs and effects, and findings highlight the wide range of uncertainty associated with the estimates of effectiveness and the impact of effectiveness on HRQoL. No data were identified as part of the effectiveness review to allow for adjustment of the effect of ERS in different populations.
There remains considerable uncertainty as to the effectiveness of ERS for increasing activity, fitness or health indicators or whether they are an efficient use of resources in sedentary people without a medical diagnosis. We failed to identify any trial-based evidence of the effectiveness of ERS in those with a medical diagnosis. Future work should include randomised controlled trials assessing the cinical effectiveness and cost-effectivenesss of ERS in disease groups that may benefit from PA.
The National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment programme.
运动推荐计划(ERS)旨在确定初级保健环境中不活跃的成年人。然后,全科医生或医疗保健专业人员将患者转介给第三方服务机构,该机构负责为患者制定和监测适合其个人需求的锻炼计划。
评估 ERS 对已知从体力活动中受益的诊断疾病患者的临床效果和成本效益。本报告的范围扩大到考虑久坐不动且没有诊断疾病的个人。
MEDLINE;EMBASE;PsycINFO;Cochrane 图书馆,ISI Web of Science;SPORTDiscus 和正在进行的试验登记处进行了检索(从 1990 年到 2009 年 10 月),并检查了包括的研究参考文献。
系统评价:ERS 的有效性、ERS 参与和依从性的预测因素,以及 ERS 的成本效益;以及开发决策分析经济模型来评估 ERS 的成本效益。
符合有效性纳入标准的有 7 项随机对照试验(英国,n = 5;非英国,n = 2),其中 5 项比较了 ERS 与常规护理,2 项比较了 ERS 与替代 PA 干预,1 项与 ERS 加自我决定理论(SDT)干预。在意向治疗分析中,与常规护理相比,在 6-12 个月的随访中,报告自我报告每周至少进行 90-150 分钟中度强度体力活动的 ERS 参与者人数增加的证据较弱[汇总相对风险(RR)1.11,95%置信区间 0.99 至 1.25]。ERS 与常规护理在中等/剧烈强度和总 PA 或其他结果(例如身体健康、血清脂质、健康相关生活质量(HRQoL))方面没有一致的证据表明存在差异。ERS 与替代 PA 干预或 ERS 加 SDT 干预之间在结局方面没有组间差异。纳入的试验均未分别报告有医学诊断个体的结局。14 项观察性研究和 5 项随机对照试验对 ERS 的采用和依从性进行了数值评估(英国,n = 16;非英国,n = 3)。女性和老年人更有可能接受 ERS,但与男性相比,女性更不可能坚持。四项先前的经济评估表明 ERS 是一种具有成本效益的干预措施。基于从头开始的基于模型的经济评估,为各种情况下的 ERS 提供了增量成本每质量调整生命年(QALY)的估计。与常规护理相比,ERS 的平均增量成本为 169 英镑,平均增量 QALY 为 0.008,在没有医疗条件的久坐不动的人中,ERS 的增量成本效益比为每 QALY 20876 英镑,在久坐不动的肥胖者中为每 QALY 14618 英镑,在久坐不动的高血压患者中为每 QALY 12834 英镑,在久坐不动的抑郁症患者中为每 QALY 8414 英镑。成本效益的估计值高度敏感于 PA 变化的 RR 和 ERS 成本的变化。
我们发现 ERS 有效性的证据非常有限。ERS 的成本效益估计基于一个简单的分析框架。经济评估报告的成本效益差异较小,结果突出了与有效性相关的估计值以及有效性对 HRQoL 的影响的不确定性。在有效性审查中没有发现任何数据,可以对不同人群中 ERS 的效果进行调整。
在增加活动、健身或健康指标方面,ERS 的有效性或在没有医学诊断的久坐不动的人群中是否是一种有效的资源利用方式,仍然存在很大的不确定性。我们没有发现任何基于试验的证据表明 ERS 对有医学诊断的个体有效。未来的工作应该包括评估 ERS 在可能从体力活动中受益的疾病群体中的临床效果和成本效益的随机对照试验。
英国国家卫生研究院健康技术评估计划。