Department of Neurology, Cognition and Behaviour, Donders Institute for Brain, Radboud University Medical Centre, Nijmegen, the Netherlands.
Vektis C.V, Zeist, the Netherlands.
Eur J Neurol. 2021 Mar;28(3):775-782. doi: 10.1111/ene.14627. Epub 2020 Dec 2.
To determine how the coverage of specialized allied health services for patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) has developed in the Netherlands since the publication of trials that demonstrated cost-effectiveness.
We used healthcare expenditure-based data on all insured individuals in the Netherlands to determine the annual proportion of patients with PD who received either specialized or generic allied health services (physiotherapy, occupational therapy, speech-language therapy) in 2 calendar years separated by a 5-year interval (2012 and 2017). Specialized allied health services were delivered through the ParkinsonNet approach, which encompassed professional training and concentration of care among specifically trained professionals.
Between 2012 and 2017, there was an increase in the number of patients with any physiotherapy (from 17,843 [62% of all patients with PD that year] to 22,282 [68%]), speech-language therapy (from 2171 [8%] to 3378 [10%]), and occupational therapy (from 2813 [10%] to 5939 [18%]). Among therapy-requiring patients, the percentage who were treated by a specialized therapist rose substantially for physiotherapy (from 36% in 2012 to 62% in 2017; χ = 2460.2; p < 0.001), speech-language therapy (from 59% to 85%; χ = 445.4; p < 0.001), and occupational therapy (from 61% to 77%; χ = 231.6; p < 0.001). By contrast, the number of patients with generic therapists did not change meaningfully. By 2017, specialized care delivery had extended to regions that had been poorly covered in 2012, essentially achieving nationwide coverage.
Following the publication of positive trials, specialized allied healthcare delivery was successfully scaled for patients with PD in the Netherlands, potentially serving as a template for other healthcare innovations for patients with PD elsewhere.
旨在确定自证明成本效益的临床试验发表以来,荷兰针对帕金森病(PD)患者的专业辅助医疗服务覆盖范围如何发展。
我们使用荷兰所有参保个人的基于医疗保健支出的数据,确定了在相隔 5 年的两个日历年内(2012 年和 2017 年),每年接受特定专业培训并集中治疗的专业人员提供的专门辅助医疗服务(物理疗法、职业疗法、言语治疗)的 PD 患者比例。专门的辅助医疗服务是通过 ParkinsonNet 方法提供的,该方法包括专业培训和特定专业人员的集中护理。
2012 年至 2017 年间,接受任何物理治疗的患者人数有所增加(从当年所有 PD 患者的 17843 人[62%]增加到 22282 人[68%])、言语治疗(从 2171 人[8%]增加到 3378 人[10%])和职业治疗(从 2813 人[10%]增加到 5939 人[18%])。在需要治疗的患者中,接受专业治疗师治疗的患者比例大幅上升,物理治疗(从 2012 年的 36%上升到 2017 年的 62%;χ²=2460.2;p<0.001)、言语治疗(从 59%上升到 85%;χ²=445.4;p<0.001)和职业治疗(从 61%上升到 77%;χ²=231.6;p<0.001)。相比之下,接受通用治疗师治疗的患者数量并没有显著变化。到 2017 年,专门的治疗服务已扩展到 2012 年覆盖较差的地区,基本上实现了全国覆盖。
在发表阳性试验后,荷兰成功地为 PD 患者扩大了专门的辅助医疗服务,这可能为其他地方的 PD 患者的其他医疗保健创新提供了模板。