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Accepted for/Published in: Journal of Medical Internet Research

Date Submitted: Dec 2, 2017
Open Peer Review Period: Dec 3, 2017 - Jan 10, 2018
Date Accepted: Jan 23, 2018
(closed for review but you can still tweet)

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

Prenatal Remote Monitoring of Women With Gestational Hypertensive Diseases: Cost Analysis

Lanssens D, Vandenberk T, Smeets CJ, De Cannière H, Vonck S, Claessens J, Heyrman Y, Vandijck D, Storms V, Thijs IM, Grieten L, Gyselaers W

Prenatal Remote Monitoring of Women With Gestational Hypertensive Diseases: Cost Analysis

J Med Internet Res 2018;20(3):e102

DOI: 10.2196/jmir.9552

PMID: 29581094

PMCID: 5891672

Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited.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.

Prenatal Remote Monitoring of Women With Gestational Hypertensive Diseases: Cost Analysis

  • Dorien Lanssens; 
  • Thijs Vandenberk; 
  • Christophe JP Smeets; 
  • Hélène De Cannière; 
  • Sharona Vonck; 
  • Jade Claessens; 
  • Yenthel Heyrman; 
  • Dominique Vandijck; 
  • Valerie Storms; 
  • Inge M Thijs; 
  • Lars Grieten; 
  • Wilfried Gyselaers

Background:

Remote monitoring in obstetrics is relatively new; some studies have shown its effectiveness for both mother and child. However, few studies have evaluated the economic impact compared to conventional care, and no cost analysis of a remote monitoring prenatal follow-up program for women diagnosed with gestational hypertensive diseases (GHD) has been published.

Objective:

The aim of this study was to assess the costs of remote monitoring versus conventional care relative to reported benefits.

Methods:

Patient data from the Pregnancy Remote Monitoring (PREMOM) study were used. Health care costs were calculated from patient-specific hospital bills of Ziekenhuis Oost-Limburg (Genk, Belgium) in 2015. Cost comparison was made from three perspectives: the Belgian national health care system (HCS), the National Institution for Insurance of Disease and Disability (RIZIV), and costs for individual patients. The calculations were made for four major domains: prenatal follow-up, prenatal admission to the hospital, maternal and neonatal care at and after delivery, and total amount of costs. A simulation exercise was made in which it was calculated how much could be demanded of RIZIV for funding the remote monitoring service.

Results:

A total of 140 pregnancies were included, of which 43 received remote monitoring (30.7%) and 97 received conventional care (69.2%). From the three perspectives, there were no differences in costs for prenatal follow-up. Compared to conventional care, remote monitoring patients had 34.51% less HCS and 41.72% less RIZIV costs for laboratory test results (HCS: mean €0.00 [SD €55.34] vs mean €38.28 [SD € 44.08], P<.001; RIZIV: mean €21.09 [SD €27.94] vs mean €36.19 [SD €41.36], P<.001) and a reduction of 47.16% in HCS and 48.19% in RIZIV costs for neonatal care (HCS: mean €989.66 [SD €3020.22] vs mean €1872.92 [SD €5058.31], P<.001; RIZIV: mean €872.97 [SD €2761.64] vs mean €1684.86 [SD €4702.20], P<.001). HCS costs for medication were 1.92% lower in remote monitoring than conventional care (mean €209.22 [SD €213.32] vs mean €231.32 [SD 67.09], P=.02), but were 0.69% higher for RIZIV (mean €122.60 [SD €92.02] vs mean €121.78 [SD €20.77], P<.001). Overall HCS costs for remote monitoring were mean €4233.31 (SD €3463.31) per person and mean €4973.69 (SD €5219.00) per person for conventional care (P=.82), a reduction of €740.38 (14.89%) per person, with savings mainly for RIZIV of €848.97 per person (23.18%; mean €2797.42 [SD €2905.18] vs mean €3646.39 [SD €4878.47], P=.19). When an additional fee of €525.07 per month per pregnant woman for funding remote monitoring costs is demanded, remote monitoring is acceptable in their costs for HCS, RIZIV, and individual patients.

Conclusions:

In the current organization of Belgian health care, a remote monitoring prenatal follow-up of women with GHD is cost saving for the global health care system, mainly via savings for the insurance institution RIZIV.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Lanssens D, Vandenberk T, Smeets CJ, De Cannière H, Vonck S, Claessens J, Heyrman Y, Vandijck D, Storms V, Thijs IM, Grieten L, Gyselaers W

Prenatal Remote Monitoring of Women With Gestational Hypertensive Diseases: Cost Analysis

J Med Internet Res 2018;20(3):e102

DOI: 10.2196/jmir.9552

PMID: 29581094

PMCID: 5891672

Per the author's request the PDF is not available.

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