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Economic evaluation of a general practitioner with special interest led dermatology service in primary care

Peters, Tim J.; Coast, Joanna; Noble, Sian; Noble, Alison; Horrocks, Sue; Asim, Oya; Salisbury, Chris

Authors

Tim J. Peters

Joanna Coast

Sian Noble

Alison Noble

Sue Horrocks Susan.Horrocks@uwe.ac.uk
Occasional Associate Lecturer - CHSS

Oya Asim

Chris Salisbury



Abstract

Objective: To carry out an economic evaluation of a general practitioner with special interest service for non-urgent skin problems compared with hospital outpatient care. Design: Cost effectiveness analysis and cost consequences analysis alongside a randomised controlled trial. Setting: General practitioner with special interest dermatology service covering 29 general practices in Bristol. Participants: Adults referred to a hospital dermatology clinic who were potentially suitable for management by a general practitioner with special interest. Interventions: Participants were randomised 2:1 to receive either care by general practitioner with special interest service or usual hospital outpatient care. Main outcome measures: Costs to NHS, patients and companions, and costs of lost production. Cost effectiveness, using the two primary outcomes of dermatology life quality index scores and improved patients perceived access, was assessed by incremental cost effectiveness ratios and cost effectiveness acceptability curves. Cost consequences are presented in relation to all costs and both primary and secondary outcomes from the trial. Results: Costs to the NHS for patients attending the general practitioner with special interest service were £208 ($361; €308) compared with £118 for hospital outpatient care. Based on analysis with imputation of missing data, costs to patients and companions were £48 and £51, respectively; costs of lost production were £27 and £34, respectively. The incremental cost effectiveness ratios for general practitioner with special interest care over outpatient care were £540 per one point gain in the dermatology life quality index and £66 per 10 point change in the access scale. Conclusions: The general practitioner with special interest service for dermatology is more costly than hospital outpatient care, but this additional cost needs to be weighed against improved access and broadly similar health outcomes.

Citation

Peters, T. J., Coast, J., Noble, S., Noble, A., Horrocks, S., Asim, O., & Salisbury, C. (2005). Economic evaluation of a general practitioner with special interest led dermatology service in primary care. BMJ, 331(7530), 1444-1448. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.38676.446910.7C

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Dec 17, 2005
Deposit Date Jan 21, 2010
Journal British Medical Journal
Print ISSN 0959-8138
Publisher BMJ Publishing Group
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 331
Issue 7530
Pages 1444-1448
DOI https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.38676.446910.7C
Keywords economic evaluation, dermatology service
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/1045801
Publisher URL http:\\dx.doi.org\10.1136/bmj.38676.446910.7C