Developing a fall prevention intervention economic model

Author:

Saunders HaileyORCID,Anderson Carol,Feldman Fabio,Holroyd-Leduc Jayna,Jain Ravi,Liu Barbara,Macaulay SusanORCID,Marr Sharon,Silvius JamesORCID,Weldon Jennifer,Bayoumi Ahmed M.,Straus Sharon E.,Tricco Andrea C.,Isaranuwatchai WanrudeeORCID

Abstract

Purpose Model-based economic evaluations require conceptualization of the model structure. Our objectives were to identify important health states, events, and patient attributes to be included in a model-based cost-effectiveness analysis of fall prevention interventions, to develop a model structure to examine cost-effectiveness of fall prevention interventions, and to assess the face validity of the model structure. Methods An expert panel comprising clinicians, health service researchers, health economists, a patient partner, and policy makers completed two rounds of online surveys to gain consensus on health states, events, and patient attributes important for fall prevention interventions. The surveys were informed by a literature search on fall prevention interventions for older adults (≥65 years) including economic evaluations and clinical practice guidelines. The results of the Delphi surveys and subsequent discussions can support the face validity of a state-transition model for an economic evaluation of fall prevention interventions. Results In total, 11 experts rated 24 health states/events and 41 patient attributes. Consensus was achieved on 14 health states/events and 26 patient characteristics. The proposed model structure incorporated 12 of the 14 selected health states/events. Panelists confirmed the face validity of the model structure during teleconferences. Conclusions There is a dearth of studies presenting the model conceptualization process; consequently, this study involving multiple end user partners with opportunities for input at several stages adds to the literature as another case study. This process is an example of how a fall prevention economic model was developed using a modified Delphi process and assessed for face validity.

Funder

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference38 articles.

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