Cost-effectiveness of the ‘Stay One Step Ahead’ Home Safety programme for the prevention of injuries among children under 5 years

Author:

Jones MatthewORCID,Orton ElizabethORCID,Taylor Michael JamesORCID,Timblin Clare,Clarke Rachel,Watson Michael Craig,Hayes Mike,Patel Tina,Coupland Carol,Kendrick DeniseORCID

Abstract

BackgroundUnintentional injuries are a common cause of morbidity and mortality in the under-5s, but undertaking home safety practices can reduce injury risk. Stay One Step Ahead (SOSA) is an evidence-based standardised home safety programme. This study evaluates the cost-effectiveness of SOSA versus usual care in Nottingham, UK.MethodsCost-effectiveness analysis from a National Health Service and personal social services perspective. SOSA activity data, injury occurrence and associated short-term healthcare costs were collected within a controlled before-and-after study from 2017 to 2020. The primary outcome was the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) per additional home adopting three key safety practices (working smoke alarm, safe poisons storage and fitted stair gate). Secondary outcomes were ICERs per injury avoided and quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) gained.ResultsSOSA costs £30 per child but reduces short-term healthcare expenditure by £42. SOSA increased the number of homes with three key safety practices by 0.02 per child, reduced injuries per child by 0.15 and gained 0.0036 QALYs per child. SOSA was dominant as it was cheaper and more effective than current practice. ICERs were −£590 per additional home deemed safe, −£77 per injury avoided and −£3225 per QALY gained. Focusing on healthcare expenditure alone, SOSA saved £1.39 for every pound spent.ConclusionsSOSA is a cost-saving intervention. Commissioners should consider implementing SOSA.

Funder

The National Lottery Community Fund A Better Start Programme

Publisher

BMJ

Reference30 articles.

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