• Med Decis Making · Aug 2015

    Comparative Study

    Economic Evaluation of Pediatric Telemedicine Consultations to Rural Emergency Departments.

    • Nikki H Yang, Madan Dharmar, Byung-Kwang Yoo, J Paul Leigh, Nathan Kuppermann, Patrick S Romano, Thomas S Nesbitt, and James P Marcin.
    • Department of Pediatrics, University of California, Davis, CA, USA (NHY, MD, NK, PSR, JPM)
    • Med Decis Making. 2015 Aug 1; 35 (6): 773-83.

    BackgroundComprehensive economic evaluations have not been conducted on telemedicine consultations to children in rural emergency departments (EDs).ObjectiveWe conducted an economic evaluation to estimate the cost, effectiveness, and return on investment (ROI) of telemedicine consultations provided to health care providers of acutely ill and injured children in rural EDs compared with telephone consultations from a health care payer prospective.MethodsWe built a decision model with parameters from primary programmatic data, national data, and the literature. We performed a base-case cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA), a probabilistic CEA with Monte Carlo simulation, and ROI estimation when CEA suggested cost-saving. The CEA was based on program effectiveness, derived from transfer decisions following telemedicine and telephone consultations.ResultsThe average cost for a telemedicine consultation was $3641 per child/ED/year in 2013 US dollars. Telemedicine consultations resulted in 31% fewer patient transfers compared with telephone consultations and a cost reduction of $4662 per child/ED/year. Our probabilistic CEA demonstrated telemedicine consultations were less costly than telephone consultations in 57% of simulation iterations. The ROI was calculated to be 1.28 ($4662/$3641) from the base-case analysis and estimated to be 1.96 from the probabilistic analysis, suggesting a $1.96 return for each dollar invested in telemedicine. Treating 10 acutely ill and injured children at each rural ED with telemedicine resulted in an annual cost-savings of $46,620 per ED.LimitationsTelephone and telemedicine consultations were not randomly assigned, potentially resulting in biased results.ConclusionsFrom a health care payer perspective, telemedicine consultations to health care providers of acutely ill and injured children presenting to rural EDs are cost-saving (base-case and more than half of Monte Carlo simulation iterations) or cost-effective compared with telephone consultations.© The Author(s) 2015.

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