Prof Thanh Phan |
In a landmark study,
researchers from Monash University have shown the cost-effectiveness of
nonadmission-based care for mini-stroke patients.
Adjunct Clinical Professor
Thanh Phan and colleagues from the School of Clinical Sciences at
Monash Health (SCS) published their microcosting study in Neurology: Clinical Practice, an official journal of the American
Academy of Neurology.
Stroke is the second
single greatest killer and one of the leading causes of disability amongst
adults in Australia.
A mini-stroke, or
transient ischaemic attack (TIA) happens when the blood supply to the brain is
interrupted for a short period of time and is often a warning that a stroke may
occur.
“TIA requires urgent
treatment,” said Professor Phan. “A recent analysis of TIA care in the United
States indicated 70 per cent of patients were admitted for 2-6 days with
average hospitalisation charges of $17,000 USD per patient.”
However, earlier studies
have proven rapid outpatient-based TIA management to be safe and associated
with low stroke rates within 90 days.
“At Monash Medical Centre
we have shown that a structured model of outpatient care, the Monash TIA
Triaging Treatment (M3T) pathway, is safe and effective compared with a
previous admission-based model,” said Professor Phan.
Beyond improved patient
care, Professor Phan’s research demonstrates a significant cost savings when
TIA patients are managed as outpatients rather than admitted to hospital.
“A TIA patient treated in
the previous admission-based model cost an average of $4,841 AUD whereas the
average total episode cost for an M3T patient was significantly less at $1,927
AUD.” This represents an approximate saving of $3000 per patient.
“Importantly, in M3T, a
net cost shift from inpatient to outpatient settings did not occur, and a true
reduction in per-patient episode costs was achieved,” said stroke health economist
Associate Professor Dominique Cadilhac.
“We estimate that only 23
patients needed to be treated in M3T per annum to offset the extra weekly
clinic costs, suggesting its feasibility even in hospitals with small caseloads.”
The research team included
SCS PhD candidate Dr Lauren Sanders and Director, Stroke and Ageing Research Centre, Associate Professor
Velandai Srikanth and Associate Professor Dominique Cadilhac.
The National Stroke Foundation reports 709,000
Australians, or 2.4% of the population, will be living with stroke by
2032. The same report estimated the
total financial costs of stroke in 2012were $5 billion, and of this major
burden, health costs were a significant $881 million.
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