School of Veterinary Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom.
Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2019 Feb 22;14(2):e0212420. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0212420. eCollection 2019.
Online testing for sexually transmitted infections has a lower unit cost than testing in clinical services and economic analysis has focused on the cost per test and cost per diagnosis in clinics and online. However, online services generate new demand for testing and shift activity between services, requiring system-level analysis to effectively predict cost-effectiveness.
Routinely collected, anonymised, retrospective data on sexual health service activity from all specialist services (clinic and online) within an inner London sexual health economy were collated and harmonised to generate a complete dataset of individual level clinic attendances. Clinic activity and diagnoses were coded using nationally standardised codes assigned by clinicians. Costs were taken from locally or regionally agreed sexual health tariffs. The introduction of online services changed patterns of testing. In an inner London sexual health economy, online STI testing increased total number of tests, the total cost of testing and total diagnoses while slightly reducing the average cost per diagnosis. Two years after the introduction of online services 37% of tests in the were provided online and total diagnoses increased. The positivity of online services is generally lower than that in clinics but varies between contexts. Where the positivity ratio between clinic and online is less than the cost ratio, online services will reduce cost per diagnosis. In this analysis, areas with different classifications as urban and rural had different clinic/online positivity ratios changing the cost effectiveness between areas. Even after the introduction of online services, simple STI testing activity continues in clinics and providers should consider online-first options where clinically appropriate.
Online services for STI testing are not 'stand alone'. They change STI testing behaviour with impacts on all elements of the sexual health economy. Planning, development and monitoring of such services should reference the dynamic nature of these systems and the role of online services within them.
在线性传播感染检测的单位成本低于临床服务,经济分析主要集中在诊所和在线检测的每测试成本和每诊断成本上。然而,在线服务会产生新的检测需求,并在服务之间转移活动,需要系统层面的分析来有效预测成本效益。
从伦敦市内性健康经济中的所有专科服务(诊所和在线)中收集了常规的匿名、回顾性性健康服务活动数据,并进行了协调,以生成个人层面诊所就诊的完整数据集。诊所活动和诊断使用临床医生分配的全国标准化代码进行编码。成本取自当地或地区性商定的性健康费率。在线服务的引入改变了检测模式。在伦敦市内性健康经济中,在线性传播感染检测增加了总检测量、检测总成本和总诊断量,同时略微降低了每诊断的平均成本。在线服务推出两年后,有 37%的检测是在线进行的,诊断量增加。在线服务的阳性率通常低于诊所,但在不同环境下有所不同。在线服务的阳性率与成本率之比小于 1 时,在线服务将降低每诊断的成本。在这项分析中,城乡分类不同的地区的诊所/在线阳性率不同,从而改变了不同地区的成本效益。即使在引入在线服务后,诊所仍会继续进行简单的性传播感染检测活动,临床医生应考虑在临床适用的情况下选择在线优先的方案。
性传播感染检测的在线服务并非“独立存在”。它们改变了性传播感染检测行为,对性健康经济的所有要素都产生了影响。此类服务的规划、开发和监测应参考这些系统的动态性质以及在线服务在其中的作用。