The cost-effectiveness of a new disease management model for frail elderly living in homes for the elderly, design of a cluster randomized controlled clinical trial

TitleThe cost-effectiveness of a new disease management model for frail elderly living in homes for the elderly, design of a cluster randomized controlled clinical trial
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2008
AuthorsBoorsma M, van Hout HPJ, Frijters DH, Ribbe MW, Nijpels G
JournalBMC Health Services Research
Volume8
Issue1
Pagination143
Date Published2008/07/07
ISBN Number1472-6963<br/>1472-6963 (Linking)
Accession Number18606020
KeywordsActivities of Daily Living, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Disease Management, Female, Frail Elderly, Homes for the Aged/ economics, Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data, Humans, Male, Patient Care Management/economics/organization & administration, Pilot Projects, Primary Health Care/economics, Quality of Health Care, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Single-Blind Method
Abstract

BACKGROUND: The objective of this article is to describe the design of a study to evaluate the clinical and economic effects of a Disease Management model on functional health, quality of care and quality of life of persons living in homes for the elderly. METHODS: This study concerns a cluster randomized controlled clinical trial among five intervention homes and five usual care homes in the North-West of the Netherlands with a total of over 500 residents. All persons who are not terminally ill, are able to be interviewed and sign informed consent are included. For cognitively impaired persons family proxies will be approached to provide outcome information. The Disease Management Model consists of several elements: (1) Trained staff carries out a multidimensional assessment of the patients functional health and care needs with the interRAI Long Term Care Facilities instrument (LTCF). Computerization of the LTCF produces immediate identification of problem areas and thereby guides individualized care planning. (2) The assessment outcomes are discussed in a Multidisciplinary Meeting (MM) with the nurse, primary care physician, nursing home physician and Psychotherapist and if necessary other members of the care team. The MM presents individualized care plans to manage or treat modifiable disabilities and risk factors. (3) Consultation by an nursing home physician and psychotherapist is offered to the frailest residents at risk for nursing home admission (according to the interRAI LTCF). Outcome measures are Quality of Care indicators (LTCF based), Quality Adjusted Life Years (Euroqol), Functional health (SF12, COOP-WONCA), Disability (GARS), Patients care satisfaction (QUOTE), hospital and nursing home days and mortality, health care utilization and costs. DISCUSSION: This design is unique because no earlier studies were performed to evaluate the effects and costs of this Disease Management Model for disabled persons in homes for the elderly on functional health and quality of care. TRAIL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN11076857.

DOI10.1186/1472-6963-8-143
Link

https://bmchealthservres.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1472-6963-8-143

Alternate JournalBMC health services research