Objective
To assess the economic effect and cost effectiveness of a targeted catheter-associated urinary tract infection (CAUTI) prevention intervention in the nursing home (NH) setting.
Design
Randomized clinical trial.
Setting
Community-based NHs (N=12).
Participants
NH residents with indwelling urinary catheters (N=418).
Intervention
Standard care versus infection prevention program involving barrier precautions, active surveillance, and NH staff education.
Measurements
Costs of the intervention, costs of disease, and health outcomes were used to calculate an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio for the intervention. Data came from intervention results and the literature and outcomes were analyzed over one year.
Results
A 120-bed NH would have program costs of $20,279/year. The cost of disease treatment would be reduced by $54,316 per year, resulting in a $34,037 net cost savings. Most of this savings would come from fewer CAUTI hospitalizations ($39,180), with $15,136 in savings from CAUTI care within the NH. The intervention also yielded a gain of 0.197 quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs). Taking into account uncertainty in all parameters suggests there is an 85% chance that the intervention is cost-saving.
Conclusions
The CAUTI prevention program is expected to benefit payers by reducing costs and improving health outcomes. Because the savings accrue to payers and not to NHs, payers such as Medicare and private insurers may want to provide incentives for NHs to implement such programs.
Trial Registration
clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT01062841
from Journal of the American Geriatrics Society http://ift.tt/2FaQt5J
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