Cost effectiveness of a telerehabilitation intervention vs home based care for adults with severe neurologic disability: A randomized clinical trial
Context Several options are available for the care of neurological conditions including care delivered in rehabilitation centres, at home or remotely. While economic studies are available comparing centres and homes, very little economic data relates to mobile teams comparing face-to-face and remote...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Digital health 2023-01, Vol.9, p.20552076231191001-20552076231191001 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Context
Several options are available for the care of neurological conditions including care delivered in rehabilitation centres, at home or remotely. While economic studies are available comparing centres and homes, very little economic data relates to mobile teams comparing face-to-face and remote care.
Objective
To conduct an economic study comparing face-to-face care at home and care delivered remotely (tele-rehabilitation).
Method
A randomised clinical study with two groups; a control group receiving home care and an experimental group receiving tele-rehabilitation. The primary outcome measure was the ICER (Incremental Cost Effectiveness Ratio).
Participants
Patients with severe neurological disabilities
Results
80 patients were enrolled in the study; 77 were analysed to calculate the ICER, which was positive and located in the SW quadrant. A bootstrap with 1000 replications was positioned at 72.8% in the SW quadrant.
Conclusion
Tele-rehabilitation is an acceptable alternative to the management of neurological patients at home. In the mildest cases, remote-rehabilitation may even be dominant. More extensive studies are needed to specify the indications. |
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ISSN: | 2055-2076 2055-2076 |
DOI: | 10.1177/20552076231191001 |