• BMJ Support Palliat Care · Dec 2013

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    Is home-based palliative care cost-effective? An economic evaluation of the Palliative Care Extended Packages at Home (PEACH) pilot.

    • Nikki McCaffrey, Meera Agar, Janeane Harlum, Jonathon Karnon, David Currow, and Simon Eckermann.
    • Flinders Centre for Clinical Change & Health Care Research, Flinders University, Bedford Park, South Australia, Australia.
    • BMJ Support Palliat Care. 2013 Dec 1;3(4):431-5.

    ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of a home-based palliative care model relative to usual care in expediting discharge or enabling patients to remain at home.DesignEconomic evaluation of a pilot randomised controlled trial with 28 days follow-up.MethodsMean costs and effectiveness were calculated for the Palliative Care Extended Packages at Home (PEACH) and usual care arms including: days at home; place of death; PEACH intervention costs; specialist palliative care service use; acute hospital and palliative care unit inpatient stays; and outpatient visits.ResultsPEACH mean intervention costs per patient ($3489) were largely offset by lower mean inpatient care costs ($2450) and in this arm, participants were at home for one additional day on average. Consequently, PEACH is cost-effective relative to usual care when the threshold value for one extra day at home exceeds $1068, or $2547 if only within-study days of hospital admission are costed. All estimates are high uncertainty.ConclusionsThe results of this small pilot study point to the potential of PEACH as a cost-effective end-of-life care model relative to usual care. Findings support the feasibility of conducting a definitive, fully powered study with longer follow-up and comprehensive economic evaluation.

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