Cost analysis of nurse telephone consultation in out of hours primary care: evidence from a randomised controlled trial
Cost analysis of nurse telephone consultation in out of hours primary care: evidence from a randomised controlled trial
Objective To undertake an economic evaluation of nurse telephone consultation using decision support software in comparison with usual general practice care provided by a general practice cooperative.
Design Cost analysis from an NHS perspective using stochastic data from a randomised controlled trial.
Setting General practice cooperative with 55 general practitioners serving 97 000 registered patients in Wiltshire, England.
Subjects All patients contacting the service, or about whom the service was contacted during the trial year (January 1997 to January 1998).
Main outcome measures Costs and savings to the NHS during the trial year.
Results The cost of providing nurse telephone consultation was £81 237 per annum. This, however, determined a £94 422 reduction of other costs for the NHS arising from reduced emergency admissions to hospital. Using point estimates for savings, the cost analysis, combined with the analysis of outcomes, showed a dominance situation for the intervention over general practice cooperative care alone. If a larger improvement in outcomes is assumed (upper 95% confidence limit) NHS savings increase to £123 824 per annum. Savings of only £3728 would, however, arise in a scenario where lower 95% confidence limits for outcome differences were observed. To break even, the intervention would have needed to save 138 emergency hospital admissions per year, around 90% of the effect achieved in the trial. Additional savings of £16 928 for general practice arose from reduced travel to visit patients at home and fewer surgery appointments within three days of a call.
Conclusions Nurse telephone consultation in out of hours primary care may reduce NHS costs in the long term by reducing demand for emergency admission to hospital. General practitioners currently bear most of the cost of nurse telephone consultation and benefit least from the savings associated with it. This indicates that the service produces benefits in terms of service quality, which are beyond the reach of this cost analysis.
1053-1057
Lattimer, Val
5aa2c9a5-13cb-4776-9b0d-c618e6913f5b
Sassi, Franco
70bbf65b-93d2-4c2a-9f37-33162a03d3ef
George, Steve
bdfc752b-f67e-4490-8dc0-99bfaeb046ca
Moore, Michael
1be81dad-7120-45f0-bbed-f3b0cc0cfe99
Turnbull, Joanne
d05b07da-b692-4378-ae60-1394cd633855
Mullee, Mark
fd3f91c3-5e95-4f56-8d73-260824eeb362
Smith, Helen
e9ebdc59-6964-49b5-a2cd-b76d58ab77e1
15 April 2000
Lattimer, Val
5aa2c9a5-13cb-4776-9b0d-c618e6913f5b
Sassi, Franco
70bbf65b-93d2-4c2a-9f37-33162a03d3ef
George, Steve
bdfc752b-f67e-4490-8dc0-99bfaeb046ca
Moore, Michael
1be81dad-7120-45f0-bbed-f3b0cc0cfe99
Turnbull, Joanne
d05b07da-b692-4378-ae60-1394cd633855
Mullee, Mark
fd3f91c3-5e95-4f56-8d73-260824eeb362
Smith, Helen
e9ebdc59-6964-49b5-a2cd-b76d58ab77e1
Lattimer, Val, Sassi, Franco, George, Steve, Moore, Michael, Turnbull, Joanne, Mullee, Mark and Smith, Helen
(2000)
Cost analysis of nurse telephone consultation in out of hours primary care: evidence from a randomised controlled trial.
BMJ, 320 (7241), .
(doi:10.1136/bmj.320.7241.1053).
(PMID:10764368)
Abstract
Objective To undertake an economic evaluation of nurse telephone consultation using decision support software in comparison with usual general practice care provided by a general practice cooperative.
Design Cost analysis from an NHS perspective using stochastic data from a randomised controlled trial.
Setting General practice cooperative with 55 general practitioners serving 97 000 registered patients in Wiltshire, England.
Subjects All patients contacting the service, or about whom the service was contacted during the trial year (January 1997 to January 1998).
Main outcome measures Costs and savings to the NHS during the trial year.
Results The cost of providing nurse telephone consultation was £81 237 per annum. This, however, determined a £94 422 reduction of other costs for the NHS arising from reduced emergency admissions to hospital. Using point estimates for savings, the cost analysis, combined with the analysis of outcomes, showed a dominance situation for the intervention over general practice cooperative care alone. If a larger improvement in outcomes is assumed (upper 95% confidence limit) NHS savings increase to £123 824 per annum. Savings of only £3728 would, however, arise in a scenario where lower 95% confidence limits for outcome differences were observed. To break even, the intervention would have needed to save 138 emergency hospital admissions per year, around 90% of the effect achieved in the trial. Additional savings of £16 928 for general practice arose from reduced travel to visit patients at home and fewer surgery appointments within three days of a call.
Conclusions Nurse telephone consultation in out of hours primary care may reduce NHS costs in the long term by reducing demand for emergency admission to hospital. General practitioners currently bear most of the cost of nurse telephone consultation and benefit least from the savings associated with it. This indicates that the service produces benefits in terms of service quality, which are beyond the reach of this cost analysis.
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Published date: 15 April 2000
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Local EPrints ID: 181683
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/181683
ISSN: 0959-8138
PURE UUID: e6eb0534-fab3-4f76-a675-ad099d32e279
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Date deposited: 05 May 2011 15:24
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:21
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Author:
Val Lattimer
Author:
Franco Sassi
Author:
Steve George
Author:
Joanne Turnbull
Author:
Helen Smith
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