TY - JOUR AU - Howard K. AU - Sherrington Catherine AU - Farag Inez AU - Ferreira Manuela AB -

BACKGROUND: An economic evaluation of interventions for older people requires accurate assessment of costing and consideration of both acute and long-term services. Accurate information on the unit cost of allied health and community services is not readily available in Australia however. This systematic review therefore aims to synthesise information available in the literature on the unit costs of allied health and community services that may be utilised by an older person living in Australia. METHOD: A comprehensive search of Medline, Embase, CINAHL, Google Scholar and Google was undertaken. Specialised economic databases were also reviewed. In addition Australian Government Department websites were inspected. The search identified the cost of specified allied health services including: physiotherapy, occupational therapy, dietetics, podiatry, counselling and home nursing. The range of community services included: personal care, meals on wheels, transport costs and domestic services. Where the information was not available, direct contact with service providers was made. RESULTS: The number of eligible studies included in the qualitative synthesis was fourty-nine. Calculated hourly rates for Australian allied health services were adjusted to be in equivalent currency and were as follows as follows: physiotherapy $157.75, occupational therapy $150.77, dietetics $163.11, psychological services $165.77, community nursing $105.76 and podiatry $129.72. CONCLUSIONS: Utilisation of the Medicare Benefits Scheduled fee as a broad indicator of the costs of services, may lead to underestimation of the real costs of services and therefore to inaccuracies in economic evaluation.

AD - George Institute for Global Health, University of Sydney, 321 Kent Street, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia. ifarag@georgeinstitute.org.au AN - 23421756 BT - BMC Health Services Research C2 - 3586358 DP - NLM ET - 21 February 2013. LA - eng N1 - Farag, Inez
Sherrington, Cathie
Ferreira, Manuela
Howard, Kirsten
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Review
England
BMC Health Serv Res. 2013 Feb 20;13:69. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-13-69. N2 -

BACKGROUND: An economic evaluation of interventions for older people requires accurate assessment of costing and consideration of both acute and long-term services. Accurate information on the unit cost of allied health and community services is not readily available in Australia however. This systematic review therefore aims to synthesise information available in the literature on the unit costs of allied health and community services that may be utilised by an older person living in Australia. METHOD: A comprehensive search of Medline, Embase, CINAHL, Google Scholar and Google was undertaken. Specialised economic databases were also reviewed. In addition Australian Government Department websites were inspected. The search identified the cost of specified allied health services including: physiotherapy, occupational therapy, dietetics, podiatry, counselling and home nursing. The range of community services included: personal care, meals on wheels, transport costs and domestic services. Where the information was not available, direct contact with service providers was made. RESULTS: The number of eligible studies included in the qualitative synthesis was fourty-nine. Calculated hourly rates for Australian allied health services were adjusted to be in equivalent currency and were as follows as follows: physiotherapy $157.75, occupational therapy $150.77, dietetics $163.11, psychological services $165.77, community nursing $105.76 and podiatry $129.72. CONCLUSIONS: Utilisation of the Medicare Benefits Scheduled fee as a broad indicator of the costs of services, may lead to underestimation of the real costs of services and therefore to inaccuracies in economic evaluation.

PY - 2013 SN - 1472-6963 (Electronic)
1472-6963 (Linking) EP - 69 T2 - BMC Health Services Research TI - A systematic review of the unit costs of allied health and community services used by older people in Australia VL - 13 ER -