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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting

Date Submitted: Jun 28, 2021
Open Peer Review Period: Jun 28, 2021 - Aug 23, 2021
Date Accepted: Oct 18, 2021
(closed for review but you can still tweet)

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Pediatric Tele–Home Care Compared to Usual Care: Cost-Minimization Analysis

Adroher Mas C, Esposito C, Batlle Boada A, Casadevall R, Millet M, García García JJ, García Cuyàs F, López Seguí F

Pediatric Tele–Home Care Compared to Usual Care: Cost-Minimization Analysis

JMIR Pediatr Parent 2022;5(1):e31628

DOI: 10.2196/31628

PMID: 35049513

PMCID: 8814920

Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.

A Cost-Minimization Analysis of Paediatric Telehomecare Compared to Usual Care: the lower cost more than compensates a longer stay

  • Cristina Adroher Mas; 
  • Candela Esposito; 
  • Astrid Batlle Boada; 
  • Ricard Casadevall; 
  • Marta Millet; 
  • Juan José García García; 
  • Francesc García Cuyàs; 
  • Francesc López Seguí

ABSTRACT

Background:

While home hospitalization has been a well-known and widespread practice for some time in the adult population, it has not been the same case in the paediatric setting. Simultaneously, telemedicine tools are a facilitator of the change in the healthcare model, which is increasingly focused on home care. In a pioneering way in Spain, the in-home hospitalization program of the Hospital Sant Joan de Déu in Barcelona allows the child to be in their home environment at the time they are being monitored and clinically followed by the professionals. In addition to being the preferred option for families, previous experience suggest that paediatric home hospitalization reduces costs, primarily thanks to savings on the structural cost of the stay.

Objective:

To compare the average cost of a discharge by telehomecare with the usual care and to analyse the main drivers of the differential costs of both care models.

Methods:

Cost-minimization analysis conducted under a hospital’s perspective, based on observational data and estimated retrospectively. A historical control group of similar patients in terms of clinical casuistry to children hospitalized at home was used for comparison.

Results:

A 24h stay at the hospital costs € 503.68, while the in-home hospitalization costs € 264.66 per day, representing a saving of almost half (48%) of the cost compared to usual care. The main savings drivers were the personnel costs (35.5% of the total), intermediate non-care costs (33.17%), and structural costs (19.04%). Home hospitalization involves a total stay 27.61% longer, but at a daily cost of almost half, represents a € 155 (9.01%) per 24h stay saving.

Conclusions:

The cost analysis conducted under a hospital perspective shows that paediatric telehomecare is 9% cheaper compared to regular hospital care. These results motivate the most widespread implementation of the service from the point of view of economic efficiency, adding to previous experiences that suggest that it is also preferable from the perspective of user satisfaction.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Adroher Mas C, Esposito C, Batlle Boada A, Casadevall R, Millet M, García García JJ, García Cuyàs F, López Seguí F

Pediatric Tele–Home Care Compared to Usual Care: Cost-Minimization Analysis

JMIR Pediatr Parent 2022;5(1):e31628

DOI: 10.2196/31628

PMID: 35049513

PMCID: 8814920

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