Pyne Jeffrey M, Fortney John C, Mouden Sip, Lu Liya, Hudson Teresa J, Mittal Dinesh
Dr. Pyne, Ms. Lu, and Dr. Hudson are with the Department of Psychiatry, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock (e-mail:
Psychiatr Serv. 2015 May 1;66(5):491-9. doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.201400186. Epub 2015 Feb 17.
Collaborative care for depression in primary care settings is effective and cost-effective. However, there is minimal evidence to support the choice of on-site versus off-site models. This study examined the cost-effectiveness of on-site practice-based collaborative care (PBCC) versus off-site telemedicine-based collaborative care (TBCC) for depression in federally qualified health centers (FQHCs).
In a multisite, randomized, pragmatic comparative cost-effectiveness trial, 19,285 patients were screened for depression, 2,863 (14.8%) screened positive, and 364 were enrolled. Telephone interview data were collected at baseline and at six, 12, and 18 months. Base case analysis used Arkansas FQHC health care costs, and secondary analysis used national cost estimates. Effectiveness measures were depression-free days and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) derived from depression-free days, the 12-Item Short-Form Survey, and the Quality of Well-Being (QWB) Scale. Nonparametric bootstrap with replacement methods were used to generate an empirical joint distribution of incremental costs and QALYs and acceptability curves.
The TBCC intervention resulted in more depression-free days and QALYs but at a greater cost than the PBCC intervention. The disease-specific (depression-free day) and generic (QALY) incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) were below their respective ICER thresholds for implementation, suggesting that the TBCC intervention was more cost effective than the PBCC intervention.
These results support the cost-effectiveness of TBCC in medically underserved primary care settings. Information about whether to insource (make) or outsource (buy) depression care management is important, given the current interest in patient-centered medical homes, value-based purchasing, and bundled payments for depression care.
在基层医疗环境中,抑郁症的协作式护理既有效又具有成本效益。然而,几乎没有证据支持选择现场模式与非现场模式。本研究考察了在联邦合格健康中心(FQHCs)中,基于现场实践的协作式护理(PBCC)与基于非现场远程医疗的协作式护理(TBCC)对抑郁症治疗的成本效益。
在一项多地点、随机、实用的比较成本效益试验中,对19285名患者进行了抑郁症筛查,2863名(14.8%)筛查呈阳性,364名患者被纳入研究。在基线以及6个月、12个月和18个月时收集电话访谈数据。基础病例分析使用阿肯色州FQHC的医疗保健成本,二次分析使用全国成本估算。有效性指标为无抑郁天数以及从无抑郁天数、12项简短调查问卷和幸福感(QWB)量表得出的质量调整生命年(QALYs)。采用有放回的非参数自助法来生成增量成本和QALYs的经验联合分布以及可接受性曲线。
TBCC干预带来了更多的无抑郁天数和QALYs,但成本高于PBCC干预。疾病特异性(无抑郁天数)和通用(QALY)增量成本效益比(ICERs)低于各自的实施ICER阈值,这表明TBCC干预比PBCC干预更具成本效益。
这些结果支持了TBCC在医疗服务不足的基层医疗环境中的成本效益。鉴于当前对以患者为中心的医疗之家、基于价值的采购以及抑郁症护理捆绑支付的关注,关于是自行提供(自制)还是外包(购买)抑郁症护理管理的信息很重要。