Department of Nursing, Melbourne School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC, 3010, Australia.
Melbourne Health Economics, Centre for Health Policy, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC, 3010, Australia.
Appl Health Econ Health Policy. 2024 Sep;22(5):665-684. doi: 10.1007/s40258-024-00902-3. Epub 2024 Jul 17.
Globally, emergency medical services (EMSs) report that their demand is dominated by non-emergency (such as urgent and primary care) requests. Appropriately managing these is a major challenge for EMSs, with one mechanism employed being specialist community paramedics. This review guides policy by evaluating the economic impact of specialist community paramedic models from a healthcare system perspective.
A multidisciplinary team (health economics, emergency care, paramedicine, nursing) was formed, and a protocol registered on PROSPERO (CRD42023397840) and published open access. Eligible studies included experimental and analytical observational study designs of economic evaluation outcomes of patients requesting EMSs via an emergency telephone line ('000', '111', '999', '911' or equivalent) responded to by specialist community paramedics, compared to patients attended by usual care (i.e. standard paramedics). A three-stage systematic search was performed, including Peer Review of Electronic Search Strategies (PRESS) and Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA). Two independent reviewers extracted and verified 51 unique characteristics from 11 studies, costs were inflated and converted, and outcomes were synthesised with comparisons by model, population, education and reliability of findings.
Eleven studies (n = 7136 intervention group) met the criteria. These included one cost-utility analysis (measuring both costs and consequences), four costing studies (measuring cost only) and six cohort studies (measuring consequences only). Quality was measured using Joanna Briggs Institute tools, and was moderate for ten studies, and low for one. Models included autonomous paramedics (six studies, n = 4132 intervention), physician oversight (three studies, n = 932 intervention) and/or special populations (five studies, n = 3004 intervention). Twenty-one outcomes were reported. Models unanimously reduced emergency department (ED) transportation by 14-78% (higher quality studies reduced emergency department transportation by 50-54%, n = 2639 intervention, p < 0.001), and costs were reduced by AU$338-1227 per attendance in four studies (n = 2962). One study performed an economic evaluation (n = 1549), finding both that the costs were reduced by AU$454 per attendance (although not statistically significant), and consequently that the intervention dominated with a > 95% chance of the model being cost effective at the UK incremental cost-effectiveness ratio threshold.
Community paramedic roles within EMSs reduced ED transportation by approximately half. However, the rate was highly variable owing to structural (such as local policies) and stochastic (such as the patient's medical condition) factors. As models unanimously reduced ED transportation-a major contributor to costs-they in turn lead to net healthcare system savings, provided there is sufficient demand to outweigh model costs and generate net savings. However, all models shift costs from EDs to EMSs, and therefore appropriate redistribution of benefits may be necessary to incentivise EMS investment. Policymakers for EMSs could consider negotiating with their health department, local ED or insurers to introduce a rebate for successful community paramedic non-ED-transportations. Following this, geographical areas with suitable non-emergency demand could be identified, and community paramedic models introduced and tested with a prospective economic evaluation or, where this is not feasible, with sufficient data collection to enable a post hoc analysis.
在全球范围内,急救医疗服务(EMS)报告称,其需求主要由非紧急情况(如紧急和初级保健)请求主导。妥善管理这些请求是 EMS 面临的主要挑战,其中一种机制是派遣专科社区护理人员。本综述从医疗保健系统的角度评估专科社区护理人员模式的经济影响,为政策提供指导。
成立了一个多学科团队(卫生经济学、急救护理、护理),并在 PROSPERO 上注册了协议(CRD42023397840)并公开获取。合格的研究包括通过紧急电话线(“000”、“111”、“999”、“911”或同等号码)请求 EMS 并由专科社区护理人员响应的患者的经济评估结果的实验和分析观察性研究设计,与由常规护理(即标准护理人员)护理的患者进行比较。进行了三阶段系统搜索,包括同行评审电子搜索策略(PRESS)和系统评价和荟萃分析的首选报告项目(PRISMA)。两名独立评审员从 11 项研究中提取并验证了 51 个独特特征,对成本进行了通胀和转换,并根据模型、人群、教育和研究结果的可靠性对结果进行了综合比较。
11 项研究(n = 7136 干预组)符合标准。其中包括一项成本效用分析(同时测量成本和结果)、四项成本研究(仅测量成本)和六项队列研究(仅测量结果)。使用 Joanna Briggs Institute 工具对质量进行了测量,其中 10 项研究的质量为中等,1 项研究的质量为低等。模型包括自主护理人员(六项研究,n = 4132 干预组)、医生监督(三项研究,n = 932 干预组)和/或特殊人群(五项研究,n = 3004 干预组)。报告了 21 项结果。模型一致将急诊科(ED)转运率降低了 14-78%(高质量研究将 ED 转运率降低了 50-54%,n = 2639 干预组,p < 0.001),并在四项研究中降低了每次就诊的成本(n = 2962),从 338 澳元到 1227 澳元不等。一项研究进行了经济评估(n = 1549),发现每次就诊的成本降低了 454 澳元(尽管没有统计学意义),因此该干预措施具有优势,模型的成本效益率超过英国增量成本效益比阈值的可能性大于 95%。
EMS 中的社区护理人员角色将急诊科的转运率降低了约一半。然而,由于结构因素(如当地政策)和随机因素(如患者的医疗状况),转运率变化很大。由于模型一致降低了急诊科的转运率——这是成本的主要贡献者——因此,只要有足够的需求来抵消模型成本并产生净节省,它们就会导致医疗保健系统的净节省。然而,所有模型都将成本从急诊科转移到 EMS,因此可能需要进行适当的利益再分配,以激励 EMS 的投资。EMS 的决策者可以考虑与他们的卫生部门、当地急诊科或保险公司协商,为成功的社区护理人员非急诊科转运提供回扣。在此之后,可以确定具有合适非紧急需求的地理区域,并引入和测试社区护理人员模型,同时进行前瞻性经济评估,或者在不可行的情况下,进行足够的数据收集,以进行事后分析。