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在低收入环境中,整合艾滋病毒、糖尿病和高血压门诊医疗服务的患者和卫生提供者成本 - 来自坦桑尼亚和乌干达的经验社会经济队列研究。

Patient and health provider costs of integrated HIV, diabetes and hypertension ambulatory health services in low-income settings - an empirical socio-economic cohort study in Tanzania and Uganda.

机构信息

Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Pembroke Place, Liverpool, L3 5QA, UK.

The AIDS Support Organisation, Mulago Hospital Complex, Kampala, Uganda.

出版信息

BMC Med. 2021 Sep 10;19(1):230. doi: 10.1186/s12916-021-02094-2.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Integration of health services might be an efficient strategy for managing multiple chronic conditions in sub-Saharan Africa, considering the scope of treatments and synergies in service delivery. Proven to promote compliance, integration may lead to increased economies-of-scale. However, evidence on the socio-economic consequences of integration for providers and patients is lacking. We assessed the clinical resource use, staff time, relative service efficiency and overall societal costs associated with integrating HIV, diabetes and hypertension services in single one-stop clinics where persons with one or more of these conditions were managed.

METHODS

2273 participants living with HIV infection, diabetes, or hypertension or combinations of these conditions were enrolled in 10 primary health facilities in Tanzania and Uganda and followed-up for up to 12 months. We collected data on resources used from all participants and on out-of-pocket costs in a sub-sample of 1531 participants, while a facility-level costing study was conducted at each facility. Health worker time per participant was assessed in a time-motion morbidity-stratified study among 228 participants. The mean health service cost per month and out-of-pocket costs per participant visit were calculated in 2020 US$ prices. Nested bootstrapping from these samples accounted for uncertainties. A data envelopment approach was used to benchmark the efficiency of the integrated services. Last, we estimated the budgetary consequences of integration, based on prevalence-based projections until 2025, for both country populations.

RESULTS

Their average retention after 1 year service follow-up was 1911/2273 (84.1%). Five hundred and eighty-two of 2273 (25.6%) participants had two or all three chronic conditions and 1691/2273 (74.4%) had a single condition. During the study, 84/2239 (3.8%) participants acquired a second or third condition. The mean service costs per month of managing two conditions in a single participant were $39.11 (95% CI 33.99, 44.33), $32.18 (95% CI 30.35, 34.07) and $22.65 (95% CI 21.86, 23.43) for the combinations of HIV and diabetes and of HIV and hypertension, diabetes and hypertension, respectively. These costs were 34.4% (95% CI 17.9%, 41.9%) lower as compared to managing any two conditions separately in two different participants. The cost of managing an individual with all three conditions was 48.8% (95% CI 42.1%, 55.3%) lower as compared to managing these conditions separately. Out-of-pocket healthcare expenditure per participant per visit was $7.33 (95% CI 3.70, 15.86). This constituted 23.4% (95% CI 9.9, 54.3) of the total monthly service expenditure per patient and 11.7% (95% CI 7.3, 22.1) of their individual total household income. The integrated clinics' mean efficiency benchmark score was 0.86 (range 0.30-1.00) suggesting undercapacity that could serve more participants without compromising quality of care. The estimated budgetary consequences of managing multi-morbidity in these types of integrated clinics is likely to increase by 21.5% (range 19.2-23.4%) in the next 5 years, including substantial savings of 21.6% on the provision of integrated care for vulnerable patients with multi-morbidities.

CONCLUSION

Integration of HIV services with diabetes and hypertension control reduces both health service and household costs, substantially. It is likely an efficient and equitable way to address the increasing burden of financially vulnerable households among Africa's ageing populations. Additional economic evidence is needed from longer-term larger-scale implementation studies to compare extended integrated care packages directly simultaneously with evidence on sustained clinical outcomes.

摘要

背景

在撒哈拉以南非洲地区,整合卫生服务可能是管理多种慢性疾病的有效策略,因为这涉及到治疗范围和服务提供的协同作用。整合已被证明可以提高患者的遵医率,并可能带来规模经济效益。然而,目前缺乏关于整合对提供者和患者的社会经济影响的证据。我们评估了在单一的一站式诊所中整合艾滋病毒、糖尿病和高血压服务后,与管理一名或多名患有这些疾病的患者相关的临床资源使用、员工时间、相对服务效率和总体社会成本。

方法

在坦桑尼亚和乌干达的 10 个基层医疗设施中,招募了 2273 名患有艾滋病毒感染、糖尿病或高血压或这些疾病组合的参与者,并进行了长达 12 个月的随访。我们从所有参与者那里收集了资源使用数据,并在 1531 名参与者的亚样本中收集了自付费用数据,同时在每个设施进行了设施层面的成本研究。在 228 名参与者中进行了时间运动发病率分层研究,评估了每位卫生工作者的时间。以 2020 年美元计算,计算了每月的平均医疗服务成本和每位患者就诊的自付费用。从这些样本中进行嵌套自举以考虑不确定性。使用数据包络分析方法对整合服务的效率进行基准测试。最后,根据基于患病率的预测,到 2025 年,我们估计了这种整合对两国人口的预算影响。

结果

他们在 1 年服务随访后的平均保留率为 1911/2273(84.1%)。2273 名参与者中有 582 名(25.6%)患有两种或三种慢性疾病,1691 名(74.4%)患有单一疾病。在研究期间,2239 名参与者中有 84 名(3.8%)获得了第二种或第三种疾病。在单个参与者中同时管理两种疾病的服务成本为每月 39.11 美元(95%CI 33.99,44.33)、32.18 美元(95%CI 30.35,34.07)和 22.65 美元(95%CI 21.86,23.43),分别为艾滋病毒和糖尿病以及艾滋病毒和高血压、糖尿病和高血压的组合。与分别在两个不同参与者中管理任何两种疾病相比,这些成本降低了 34.4%(95%CI 17.9%,41.9%)。与分别管理这些疾病相比,管理所有三种疾病的个人成本降低了 48.8%(95%CI 42.1%,55.3%)。每位患者每次就诊的自付医疗费用为 7.33 美元(95%CI 3.70,15.86)。这占患者每月总服务支出的 23.4%(95%CI 9.9%,54.3%)和他们个人总收入的 11.7%(95%CI 7.3%,22.1%)。综合诊所的平均效率基准得分是 0.86(范围 0.30-1.00),表明存在能力不足的情况,在不影响护理质量的情况下,可以为更多的患者提供服务。在未来 5 年内,这些类型的综合诊所管理多种疾病的预算影响可能会增加 21.5%(范围 19.2%-23.4%),其中为有多种疾病的弱势群体提供综合护理的节省幅度将达到 21.6%。

结论

整合艾滋病毒服务与糖尿病和高血压控制可降低卫生服务和家庭成本,幅度相当大。这可能是一种有效和公平的方式,可以应对非洲老龄化人口中弱势家庭的经济负担不断增加的问题。需要从更长期、更大规模的实施研究中获得更多的经济证据,以直接同时比较扩展的综合护理方案与持续的临床结果证据。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/2034/8431904/d78e8058ea0c/12916_2021_2094_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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