Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Purpose: The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted healthcare services globally, necessitating innovative care delivery models for non-communicable diseases. Remote healthcare pathways, including telehealth with pharmacy at home (PAH) and deferred care (DC), emerged as potential solutions for managing stable hypertension (HT) and diabetes mellitus (DM) patients. This study aims to estimate the budget impact of implementing PAH and DC compared to usual care (UC) for HT and DM patients in Thai tertiary care hospitals from the government perspective.

Methods:  A retrospective budget impact analysis was conducted using data from July-December 2021 (COVID-19 period) and July-December 2022 (new normal period). The study included stable patients from 35 tertiary care hospitals in Thailand. Direct medical costs were obtained from administrative databases and national costing studies. Multivariate log-linear regression models estimated conditional costs, controlling for patient characteristics. The analysis compared baseline scenario (UC only) versus alternative scenario (UC+PAH+DC). Sensitivity analyses were performed using 95% confidence intervals and ±20% population variations.

Results:  The alternative scenario demonstrated lower total budgets in both periods. During COVID-19, total costs were 12.23 versus 12.94 million USD (baseline), yielding 0.71 million USD in savings. In the new normal, costs were 11.93 versus 12.54 million USD (baseline), generating 0.61 million USD in savings. Cost-saving ratios were 0.06 USD and 0.05 USD per dollar allocated during the COVID-19 and new normal periods, respectively. Sensitivity analyses confirmed robustness across parameter variations.

Conclusion: PAH and DC pathways represent economically advantageous alternatives, demonstrating cost savings from the government perspective. These findings support implementing remote healthcare delivery in resource-constrained settings, though comprehensive evaluations incorporating societal and patient perspectives are warranted. The findings are based on extrapolation-based results and should be interpreted with caution due to variability in parameters including adoption rates of PAH/DC, unit costs applied, patient numbers, retrospective design, bundled interventions, and the savings ratio.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12406030PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CEOR.S538395DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

budget impact
12
remote healthcare
12
covid-19 pandemic
8
impact analysis
8
healthcare delivery
8
hypertension diabetes
8
diabetes mellitus
8
tertiary care
8
care hospitals
8
alternative scenario
8

Similar Publications

Drought stress has profound impacts on ecosystems and societies, particularly in the context of climate change. Traditional drought indicators, which often rely on integrated water budget anomalies at various time scales, provide valuable insights but often fail to deliver clear, real-time assessments of vegetation stress. This study introduces the Cooling Efficiency Factor Index (CEFI), a novel metric purely derived from geostationary satellite observations, to detect vegetation drought stress by analyzing daytime surface warming anomalies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Policymakers face challenges in developing pricing policies for potentially innovative healthcare technologies (pIHTs) that balance limited budgets, access, and incentives for innovation. This study aimed to map existing evidence and identify knowledge gaps regarding price determinants and pricing policies for pIHTs and their effect on access and sustainability.

Methods: We conducted a scoping Review of scientific and grey literature in English published between 2014 and September 2023 with pre-specified inclusion and exclusion criteria to identify stakeholder-informed price determinants, pricing policies applied by European Economic Area (EEA) or Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) member states, and their access-related impacts.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: Assessing the impact of the recent excise hike in Poland, with particular attention to differences between tertiary-educated and non-tertiary-educated populations.

Methods: We use the nationally representative Household Budget Survey data from 2010 to 2022 to estimate changes in smoking behaviour in response to cigarette affordability at both the extensive and intensive margins. Combining these estimates with European Health Interview Survey data, we simulate the effects of excise hikes for smoking prevalence and consumption in 2025-2027.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Unraveling ozone formation sensitivity to ambient VOCs and NOx at urban and mountain sites in a typical city of eastern China.

Environ Pollut

September 2025

School of Environment, Hangzhou Institute for Advanced Study, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Hangzhou 310024, China; State Key Laboratory of Environmental Chemistry and Ecotoxicology, Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100085, China.

Ozone (O) is a primary pollutant affecting air quality in China, whose formation rate was non-linearly based on volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and nitrogen oxides (NOx). A comprehensive understanding of the key drivers governing O formation and its sensitivity to precursor variations presents a persistent research challenge, stemming from the complex interplay of underlying photochemistry, meteorology, and topography. To address this knowledge gap, we conducted synchronous measurements of O and its precursors at both an urban (JPU) and a mountain (LM) site in a typical city in eastern China, enabling concurrent evaluation of O formation sensitivity and diagnostic analysis of its underlying mechanisms.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Importance: The US Inflation and Reduction Act (IRA) prohibits the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) from using discriminatory methods such as cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) that assign lower value to treating sicker and disabled persons. Generalized risk-adjusted cost- effectiveness (GRACE) provides a nondiscriminatory alternative, but the potential impact on health care budgets is unknown.

Objective: To compare value-based drug prices based on traditional CEA with those based on IRA-compliant GRACE and assess the implications for health care budgets.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF