Quantifying sustained health system benefits of primary care-based integrated disease management for COPD: a 6-year interrupted time series study

Author:

Licskai Christopher,Hussey AnnaORCID,Rowley Véronique,Ferrone Madonna,Lu Zihang,Zhang Kimball,Terebessy Emilie,Scarffe Andrew,Sibbald Shannon,Faulds Cathy,O'Callahan Tim,To Teresa

Abstract

BackgroundSevere exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a trajectory-changing life event for patients and a major contributor to health system costs. This study evaluates the real-world impact of a primary care, integrated disease management (IDM) programme on acute health service utilisation (HSU) in the Canadian health system.MethodsInterrupted time series analysis using retrospective health administrative data, comparing monthly HSU event rates 3 years prior to and 3 years following the implementation of COPD IDM. Primary outcomes were COPD-related hospitalisation and emergency department (ED) visits. Secondary outcomes included hospital bed days and all-cause HSU.ResultsThere were 2451 participants. COPD-related and all-cause HSU rates increased in the 3 years prior to IDM implementation. With implementation, there was an immediate decrease (month 1) in COPD-related hospitalisation and ED visit rates of −4.6 (95% CI: −7.76 to –1.39) and −6.2 (95% CI: –11.88, –0.48) per 1000 participants per month, respectively, compared with the counterfactual control group. After 12 months, COPD-related hospitalisation rates decreased: −9.1 events per 1000 participants per month (95% CI: –12.72, –5.44) and ED visits −19.0 (95% CI: –25.50, –12.46). This difference nearly doubled by 36 months. All-cause HSU also demonstrated rate reductions at 12 months, hospitalisation was −10.2 events per 1000 participants per month (95% CI: –15.79, –4.44) and ED visits were −30.4 (95% CI: –41.95, –18.78).ConclusionsImplementation of COPD IDM in a primary care setting was associated with a changed trajectory of COPD-related and all-cause HSU from an increasing year-on-year trend to sustained long-term reductions. This highlights a substantial real-world opportunity that may improve health system performance and patient outcomes.

Publisher

BMJ

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