TY - JOUR T1 - Cost-effectiveness of Anticipatory and Preventive multidisciplinary Team Care for complex patients JF - Canadian Family Physician JO - Can Fam Physician SP - e20 LP - e29 VL - 56 IS - 1 AU - David Gray AU - Catherine Deri Armstrong AU - Simone Dahrouge AU - William Hogg AU - Wei Zhang Y1 - 2010/01/01 UR - http://www.cfp.ca/content/56/1/e20.abstract N2 - OBJECTIVE To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of Anticipatory and Preventive Team Care (APTCare). DESIGN Analysis of data drawn from a randomized controlled trial. SETTING A family health network in a rural area near Ottawa, Ont. PARTICIPANTS Patients 50 years of age or older at risk of experiencing adverse health outcomes. Analysis of cost-effectiveness was performed for a subsample of participants with at least 1 of the chronic diseases used in the quality of care (QOC) measure (74 intervention and 78 control patients). INTERVENTIONS At-risk patients were randomly assigned to receive usual care from their family physicians or APTCare from a collaborative team. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Cost-effectiveness and the net benefit to society of the APTCare intervention. RESULTS Costs not directly associated with delivery of the intervention were similar in the 2 arms: $9121 and $9222 for the APTCare and control arms, respectively. Costs directly associated with the program were $3802 per patient for a total cost per patient of $12 923 and $9222, respectively (P = .033). A 1% improvement in QOC was estimated to cost $407 per patient. Analysis of the net benefit to society in absolute dollars found a breakeven threshold of $750 when statistical significance was required. This implies that society must place a value of at least $750 on a 1% improvement in QOC in order for the intervention to be socially worthwhile. By any of the metrics used, the APTCare intervention was not cost-effective, at least not in a population for which baseline QOC was high. CONCLUSION Although our calculations suggest that the APTCare intervention was not cost-effective, our results need the following caveats. The costs of such a newly introduced intervention are bound to be higher than those for an established, up-and-running program. Furthermore, it is possible that some benefits of the secondary preventive measures were not captured in this limited 12- to 18-month study or were simply not measured. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER NCT00238836 (CONSORT). ER -