Article,

Economic and clinical impact of alternative disease management strategies for secondary prevention in type 2 diabetes in the Swiss setting

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Swiss Medical Weekly, (2001)

Abstract

Principles: Different intervention strategies or the optimisation of disease management of diabetes exist and have been shown to increase the proportion of patients receiving screening and examinations and to improve risk factors such as HbA1c, lipids, and blood pressure. Thus, in the long-term, a decrease in diabetic complications and the associated costs could be expected. To address this question, the current analysis used a published diabetes simulation model to analyse the long-term clinical and economic implications of implementing various interventions in the Swiss setting. Methods: Based on data rom the literature, the short-term effects on clinical variables of multifactorial interventions, including screening for nephropathy and retinopathy, educational programmes and control of cardiovascular risk profile were assessed, and a cost-effectiveness analysis in comparison to standard care was performed. Life expectancy (LE) and total lifetime costs (TC) from the perspective of the health insurance payer were calculated using a long-term Markov simulation model. Results: The multifactorial intervention led to an improvement in undiscounted LE of 0.56 years (LE =10.73 and 11.29 years for standard care and multifactorial intervention respectively), and a reduction in 3%-discounted TC of CHF 7313 (10.7%) per patient compared to current standard practice. Extrapolation to the whole Swiss type 2 diabetes population (285 000) showed yearly cost savings of CHF 194 million from the multifactorial intervention. Conclusions: The implementation of multifactorial interventions, including improved control of cardiovascular risk actors, combined with early diagnosis and treatment of diabetic complications, could be both cost- and life-saving in the Swiss setting..

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