The Economic Value of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Carbapenem-Resistant Enterobacteriaceae Toolkit
Authored by Sarah M Bartsch, Bruce Y Lee, Susan S Huang, James A McKinnell, Kim F Wong, Leslie E Mueller, Loren G Miller
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1017/ice.2018.49
Sponsors:
United States National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
OBJECTIVE. While previous work showed that the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention toolkit for carbapenem-resistant
Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) can reduce spread regionally, these
interventions are costly, and decisions makers want to know whether and
when economic benefits occur.
DESIGN. Economic analysis.
SETTING. Orange County, California.
METHODS. Using our Regional Healthcare Ecosystem Analyst
(RHEA)-generated agent-based model of all inpatient healthcare
facilities, we simulated the implementation of the CRE toolkit (active
screening of interfacility transfers) in different ways and estimated
their economic impacts under various circumstances.
RESULTS. Compared to routine control measures, screening generated cost
savings by year 1 when hospitals implemented screening after identifying
<= 20 CRE cases (saving \$2,000-\$9,000) and by year 7 if all hospitals
implemented in a regional coordinated manner after 1 hospital identified
a CRE case (hospital perspective). Cost savings was achieved only if
hospitals independently screened after identifying 10 cases (year 1,
third-party payer perspective). Cost savings was achieved by year 1 if
hospitals independently screened after identifying 1 CRE case and by
year 3 if all hospitals coordinated and screened after 1 hospital
identified 1 case (societal perspective). After a few years, all
strategies cost less and have positive health effects compared to
routine control measures; most strategies generate a positive
cost-benefit each year.
CONCLUSIONS. Active screening of interfacility transfers garnered cost
savings in year 1 of implementation when hospitals acted independently
and by year 3 if all hospitals collectively implemented the toolkit in a
coordinated manner. Despite taking longer to manifest, coordinated
regional control resulted in greater savings over time.
Tags
Epidemiology
Infections
Hospitals
United-states
Health-care facilities
Pneumoniae