THE ESSENCE PROJECT

EVIDENCE

Cost effectiveness of pilot self-assessment sites in community care services in England

Cost effectiveness of pilot self-assessment sites in community care services in England
Clarkson P Australian Health Review, 37, 666-674. 2013


Project ID (Internal) 36
Project Status completed
Full Reference (text) Clarkson P, Brand C, Challis D, et al (2013) Cost effectiveness of pilot self-assessment sites in community care services in England. Australian Health Review. 37: 666-674. [The abstract can be accessed here]
Full Reference (URL) https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24160485
Summary / Abstract

OBJECTIVE:
Self-assessment has been advocated in community care but little is known of its cost effectiveness in practice. We evaluated cost effectiveness of pilot self-assessment approaches.

METHODS:
Data were collected from 13 pilot projects in England, selected by central government, between October 2006 and November 2007. These were located within preventative services for people with low-level needs, occupational therapy, or assessment and care management. Cost effectiveness, over usual care, was assessed by incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs), in British pounds per unit gain in assessment satisfaction. A public-sector perspective was adopted; the provider costs of the agencies taking part.

RESULTS:
At 2006-07 prices, including start-up and on-going costs, only three pilots demonstrated cost effectiveness. Two pilots in assessment and care management had ICERs of £3810 and £755 per satisfaction gained, well below a benchmark from a trial of usual assessment of £18296 per satisfaction gained. When extrapolating uptake to numbers accessing assessments over 1 year, one occupational therapy pilot, of £123/satisfaction gained, also fell below this benchmark in sensitivity analysis. There was less evidence for preventative services.

CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS:
Most pilot projects were not cost effective. However, self assessment is potentially cost effective in assessment and care management and occupational therapy services. Better quality cost data from pilot sites would have permitted more detailed analysis. Measuring downstream effects in terms of users’ well being from receipt of self-assessment would also be beneficial.

Publication Title Cost effectiveness of pilot self-assessment sites in community care services in England
Author(s) Clarkson P
Publication Details Australian Health Review, 37, 666-674.
Publication Year / End of Project 2013
Last Accessed 03/01/2019 12:00 am

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