A randomized controlled trial assessing the health economics of realtime teledermatology compared with conventional care: an urban versus rural perspective


Autoria(s): Loane, MA; Bloomer, SE; Corbett, R; Eedy, DJ; Evans, C; Hicks, N; Jacklin, P; Lotery, HE; Mathews, C; Paisley, J; Reid, P; Steele, K; Wootton, R
Contribuinte(s)

R Wootton

Data(s)

01/01/2001

Resumo

A randomized controlled trial was carried out to measure the cost-effectiveness of realtime teledermatology compared with conventional outpatient dermatology care for patients from urban and rural areas. One urban and one rural health centre were linked to a regional hospital in Northern Ireland by ISDN at 128 kbit/s. Over two years, 274 patients required a hospital outpatient dermatology referral -126 patients (46%) were randomized to a telemedicine consultation and 148 (54%) to a conventional hospital outpatient consultation. Of those seen by telemedicine, 61% were registered with an urban practice, compared with 71% of those seen conventionally. The clinical outcomes of the two types of consultation were similar - almost half the patients were managed after a single consultation with the dermatologist. The observed marginal cost per patient of the initial realtime teledermatology consultation was f52.85 for those in urban areas and f59.93 per patient for those from rural areas. The observed marginal cost of the initial conventional consultation was f47.13 for urban patients and f48.77 for rural patients. The total observed costs of teledermatology were higher than the costs of conventional care in both urban and rural areas, mainly because of the fixed equipment costs. Sensitivity analysis using a real-world scenario showed that in urban areas the average costs of the telemedicine and conventional consultations were about equal, while in rural areas the average cost of the telemedicine consultation was less than that of the conventional consultation.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:59848

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Royal Society of Medicine

Palavras-Chave #Health Care Sciences & Services #Cost-benefit-analysis #Northern-ireland #Multicenter Teledermatology #Patient Satisfaction #Diagnostic-accuracy #New-zealand #Telemedicine #Dermatology #Teleconsultations #C1 #329999 Medical and Health Sciences not elsewhere classified #730199 Clinical health not specific to particular organs, diseases and conditions
Tipo

Journal Article