TY - JOUR
T1 - What to consider when conducting a cost-effectiveness analysis in a clinical setting
AU - Naglak, Mary
AU - Mitchell, Diane C.
AU - Kris-Etherton, Penny
AU - Harkness, William
AU - Pearson, Thomas A.
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was funded, in part, by The American Dietetic Association Foundation (Mary Naglak, PhD, RD) and NIH grant HL 44177 from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (Thomas Pearson, MD, PhD).
PY - 1997
Y1 - 1997
N2 - More data are needed providing strong evidence that nutrition services arc cost-effective. Economic evaluations, such as cost-effectiveness analyses, are excellent practice-based research projects. We conducted a cost-effectiveness analysis in a clinical setting to compare the cost-effectiveness of lipid-lowering medications plus diet therapy (medication+ diet) with diet therapy alone (diet alone) for treating patients with hypercholesterolemia. Twenty-five adults with hypereholesterolemia (13 receiving medication+diet, 12 receiving diet alone) either participated in an 8-week, home-based, step 1 intervention or were counseled about diet and lifestyle by their care provider. Diet, cost, and laboratory data were collected at baseline, at 9 months, and at 19 months after participation in the intervention (follow-up). Cost per unit change in outcome was evaluated for each group. The diet-alone group made only small changes in dietary intake, changes that were smaller in magnitude than those made by the medication+diet group. Nevertheless, at 9 months, costs per unit change in total serum cholesterol level and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) level were approximately $24 and $83 less, respectively, for the diet-alone group. At follow-up, however, the cost per unit change in LDL-C level was approximately $17 less for the medication+ diet group, which can be explained by the medication+diet group's greater decrease in LDL-C level. The following elements should be considered when conducting a cost-effectiveness analysis of medical nutrition therapy: effectiveness of the nutrition intervention, adequate sample size, confounding variables, compliance with diet and drug therapy, direct and indirect costs of care, and follow-up evaluation.
AB - More data are needed providing strong evidence that nutrition services arc cost-effective. Economic evaluations, such as cost-effectiveness analyses, are excellent practice-based research projects. We conducted a cost-effectiveness analysis in a clinical setting to compare the cost-effectiveness of lipid-lowering medications plus diet therapy (medication+ diet) with diet therapy alone (diet alone) for treating patients with hypercholesterolemia. Twenty-five adults with hypereholesterolemia (13 receiving medication+diet, 12 receiving diet alone) either participated in an 8-week, home-based, step 1 intervention or were counseled about diet and lifestyle by their care provider. Diet, cost, and laboratory data were collected at baseline, at 9 months, and at 19 months after participation in the intervention (follow-up). Cost per unit change in outcome was evaluated for each group. The diet-alone group made only small changes in dietary intake, changes that were smaller in magnitude than those made by the medication+diet group. Nevertheless, at 9 months, costs per unit change in total serum cholesterol level and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) level were approximately $24 and $83 less, respectively, for the diet-alone group. At follow-up, however, the cost per unit change in LDL-C level was approximately $17 less for the medication+ diet group, which can be explained by the medication+diet group's greater decrease in LDL-C level. The following elements should be considered when conducting a cost-effectiveness analysis of medical nutrition therapy: effectiveness of the nutrition intervention, adequate sample size, confounding variables, compliance with diet and drug therapy, direct and indirect costs of care, and follow-up evaluation.
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M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:33645016160
SN - 0002-8223
VL - 97
SP - 1149
EP - 1154
JO - Journal of the American Dietetic Association
JF - Journal of the American Dietetic Association
IS - 10 SUPPL.
ER -