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A cost comparison of an enhanced primary care diabetes service and standard care.

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journal contribution
posted on 2021-01-06, 16:38 authored by Samuel Seidu, Clare Gillies, Azhar Farooqi, Hina Trivedi, Tun Than, Emer Brady, Melanie J Davies, Kamlesh Khunti
Background
Type 2 diabetes, which contributes 90% of all cases of diabetes mellitus is now mostly managed in the primary care settings in the UK and other advanced health care systems. The UK National Health Service as a whole could potentially benefit if more patients were managed in primary care settings since primary care‐based care is likely to be more cost‐effective. We initially compared eight larger general practices (Enhanced practices) in Leicester, UK with neighbouring smaller practices (Core practices) matched for comparable demographic characteristics. Even though this initial study did not find any statistically significant differences in terms of clinical outcomes there was trend in favour of the enhanced practices. In this current study, we conducted a cost comparison of enhanced practice model of diabetes care, to standard care delivered in the core practices.

Methods
Data and information were combined from a number of sources and a cost comparison evaluation was carried out in WinBUGs. A probabilistic approach was taken, to allow uncertainty to be included around analysis parameters where appropriate. The analysis evaluated a straight-forward cost comparison of enhanced versus standard care.

Results
The cost per person with diabetes per year was £255 (95% CrI 175, 380) in the core practices and £173 (95% CrI 96, 291) in the enhanced practices, resulting in an annual cost saving of –£83 (95% CrI -148, -28) per patient. If the enhanced model of diabetes care were delivered across all the practices in the UK, the cost would be £575,100,000 (95% CrI 320,700,000, 970,700,000), resulting in an annual cost saving of -276,200,000 (95% CrI -495,400,000, -94,480,000).

Conclusion
A cost comparison analysis of our larger enhanced primary care based diabetes service confirms significant cost saving, probably driven by economies of scale. These benefits could be multiplied manifold if the service was implemented nationally.

History

Author affiliation

Diabetes Research Centre, College of Life Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Primary Care Diabetes

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

1751-9918

eissn

1878-0210

Acceptance date

2020-10-27

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2021-12-02

Spatial coverage

England

Language

eng

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