3.9 Article

Economic Evaluation of a Hospital Based Palliative Care Program

Journal

JOURNAL OF ONCOLOGY PRACTICE
Volume 13, Issue 5, Pages E408-E420

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL ONCOLOGY
DOI: 10.1200/JOP.2016.018036

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Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [146181]
  2. California Healthcare Foundation [18339]
  3. National Cancer Institute [P30 CA 006973]
  4. Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute [4362]
  5. NINR [1-R01 NR014050 01, 1R01 CA177562-01]

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Purpose Establish costs of an inpatient palliative care unit (PCU) and conduct a threshold analysis to estimate the maximum possible costs for the PCU to be considered cost effective. Methods We used a hospital perspective to determine costs on the basis of claims from administrative data from Johns Hopkins PCU between March 2013 and March 2014. Using existing literature, we estimated the number of quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) that the PCU could generate. We conducted a threshold analysis to assess the maximum costs for the PCU to be considered cost effective, incorporating willingness to pay ($180,000 per QALY). Three types of costs were considered, which included variable costs alone, contribution margin (ie, revenue minus variable costs), and PCU cost savings compared with usual care (from a separate publication). Results The data showed that there were 153 patient encounters (PEs), variable costs of $1,050,031 ($1,343 per PE per day), a contribution margin of $318,413 ($407 per PE per day), and savings compared with usual care of $353,645 ($452 savings per PE per day). On the basis of the literature, the program could generate 3.11 QALYs from PEs (0.05 QALY) and caregivers (3.06 QALYs). The threshold analysis determined that the maximum variable cost required to be cost effectivewas$559,800 (an additional $716 perPEper day could be spent). Conclusion According to variable costs, the PCU was not cost effective; however, when considering savings of the PCU compared with usual care, the PCU was cost saving. The contribution margin showed that the PCU was cost saving. This study supports efforts to expand PCUs, which enhance care for patients and their caregivers and can generate hospital savings. Future research should prospectively explore the cost utility of PCUs.

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