The Value Proposition of Prevention: The Impacts of Pure North S’Energy Foundation’s Preventive Care Program on Acute Care Utilization in Alberta

J. Emery
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Abstract

This analysis of Pure North S’Energy Foundation’s preventive health services shows that the acute health care cost savings of being pro-active, rather than reactive, and averting chronic disease, are significant, immediate and worth pursuing further. Chronic disease, such as cardiovascular maladies, diabetes, cancer and other long-term illnesses, represents the leading cause of disability and death in Canada. An estimated 25 per cent of expenditures in the public health system go towards treating these frequently avoidable diseases. This health-care cost curve, which sees more money expended on fighting the increase of chronic disease, can be bent, so to speak, through prevention services that offer long-term benefits to people’s health. Preventing disease is not just good for individuals, but for the health system in general, as prevention frees up acute care beds for more timely access by those who need them. The concern for health care decision makers struggling to find dollars to meet current health care needs is that investment in prevention is risky compared spending on medical treatment. It is often expressed that the health cost savings of prevention are too far off in the future and there is a lack of convincing evidence that preventive services and interventions will achieve the health gains expected. Pure North offers participants in its eight-year-old program access to a variety of healthcare practitioners, including doctors, naturopaths, nurses, nurse practitioners and dentists. Participants receive lifestyle counselling and dietary supplements aimed at combating vitamin D insufficiency, obesity, insulin resistance and other problems that can lead to chronic disease. Our study found that participants who stay with the program for two years demonstrate significant reductions in their number of visits to emergency rooms and hospitals. Indeed, after just one year in the program, the number of hospital visits was down 27 per cent and the number of visits for ambulatory care reduced by 14 per cent over a control group matched for age, sex and postal code, who did not participate in the Pure North program. In the second year after joining the program, hospital admissions dropped by 32 per cent for participants aged 55 and over. If these effects could be achieved in the population of Albertans aged 55 to 75, the hospital bed nights freed up per year would be equivalent to adding the acute care bed capacity of the Foothills Medical Centre in Calgary. These figures translate into significant cost differences. The average cost of hospitals, ambulatory care and visits to general practitioners in the year prior to joining Pure North’s program came to $1,320 per individual. Cost reductions in annual health-care utilization among participants ranged from $294 (22 per cent) per person who joined the program to $600 (45 per cent) per person who stayed in the program for at least a year. Two years into the program, a participant could expect to avoid $276 in hospitalization and emergency room costs. The Pure North program is a cost-effective model for preventive health services, resulting in better health and labour productivity for individuals, and considerable savings in public money for the health-care system. Every dollar spent on a participant who stays with the program for at least a year represents a $2.36 benefit in the avoidance of hospitalization and ambulatory care, as well as gains in personal health and productivity. The public health-care system must shift its focus to preventive care if it wants to realize cost savings, efficiency and improved health for Albertans, rather than waiting to treat people until after they become ill with chronic diseases. Pure North offers an important model to help the public system understand how to make that transition to a prevention-oriented mindset.
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预防的价值主张:纯北能源基金会的预防护理计划对阿尔伯塔省急性护理利用的影响
对纯北能源基金会预防性保健服务的分析表明,积极主动而不是被动被动地预防慢性疾病所节省的急性保健费用是显著的、直接的,值得进一步追求。慢性疾病,如心血管疾病、糖尿病、癌症和其他长期疾病,是加拿大致残和死亡的主要原因。公共卫生系统估计有25%的支出用于治疗这些经常可以避免的疾病。可以说,这条医疗保健成本曲线可以通过为人们的健康提供长期利益的预防服务来弯曲,因为更多的钱花在了抗击慢性病的增加上。预防疾病不仅对个人有好处,而且对整个卫生系统也有好处,因为预防可以腾出急诊床位,使需要的人能够更及时地获得这些床位。卫生保健决策者们努力寻找资金来满足当前的卫生保健需求,他们担心的是,与医疗支出相比,在预防方面的投资风险很大。人们常常表示,预防所节省的保健费用在未来还太遥远,而且缺乏令人信服的证据表明,预防服务和干预措施将实现预期的保健收益。Pure North项目已经开展了8年,参与者可以接触到各种各样的医疗保健从业者,包括医生、自然疗法师、护士、执业护士和牙医。参与者接受生活方式咨询和膳食补充,旨在对抗维生素D不足、肥胖、胰岛素抵抗和其他可能导致慢性疾病的问题。我们的研究发现,参加这个项目两年的人去急诊室和医院的次数显著减少。事实上,与没有参加“纯净北方”计划的年龄、性别和邮政编码相匹配的对照组相比,参与该计划仅一年后,医院就诊次数减少了27%,门诊就诊次数减少了14%。在参加该计划的第二年,55岁及以上的参与者入院率下降了32%。如果能在55岁至75岁的艾伯塔省人口中实现这些效果,每年腾出的医院床位夜数将相当于增加卡尔加里山麓医疗中心的急诊床位容量。这些数字转化为巨大的成本差异。在加入Pure North项目前一年,每个人的平均住院费用、门诊护理费用和全科医生就诊费用为1320美元。参与者每年保健利用费用的减少幅度从参加方案的每人294美元(22%)到参加方案至少一年的每人600美元(45%)不等。参加该项目两年之后,一名参与者有望节省276美元的住院和急诊室费用。纯北方案是一种具有成本效益的预防性保健服务模式,提高了个人的健康水平和劳动生产率,并为保健系统节省了大量公共资金。每花1美元在参加该计划至少一年的参与者身上,就意味着在避免住院和门诊治疗方面获得2.36美元的收益,同时个人健康和生产力也有所提高。公共卫生保健系统如果要实现节约成本、提高效率和改善阿尔伯塔人的健康,就必须把重点转向预防性保健,而不是等到人们患上慢性病之后才进行治疗。纯北提供了一个重要的模式,帮助公共系统了解如何过渡到以预防为导向的心态。
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