Author:
Wilson Stephen F,Shorten Brett,MI Marks Rhona
Abstract
The Macarthur Health Service introduced an innovative
Acute Ambulatory Care Service (MACS) in
2000. The service was designed to substitute
patient care previously provided in hospital beds
with care in the patient?s home. The financial
implications of complete or partial substitution of
hospital care were explored using local data
sources from the introduction of the service in
2001?2002. These data were analysed using the
NSW Department of Health cost of care methodology.
This study determined that episodes of care
in MACS were less costly than equivalent episodes
of inpatient care for selected diagnoses.
The Macarthur cost of care data confirmed substantial
savings (63%) in cases in certain diagnostic
groups (cellulitis, pneumonia) with complete
substitution, and lower savings (50%) for partial
substitution of care when compared with hospital
admission. Savings are likely to be greater as the
level of substitution increases and are dependent
on the choice of ambulatory sensitive diagnoses.
Cited by
11 articles.
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