Models of care for the delivery of secondary fracture prevention after hip fracture: a health service cost, clinical outcomes and cost-effectiveness study within a region of England
- PMID: 27748091
 - Bookshelf ID: NBK385615
 - DOI: 10.3310/hsdr04280
 
Models of care for the delivery of secondary fracture prevention after hip fracture: a health service cost, clinical outcomes and cost-effectiveness study within a region of England
Excerpt
Background: Professional bodies have produced comprehensive guidance about the management of hip fracture. They recommend orthogeriatric services focusing on achieving optimal recovery, and fracture liaison services (FLSs) focusing on secondary fracture prevention. Despite such guidelines being in place, there is significant variation in how services are structured and organised between hospitals.
Objectives: To establish the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of changes to the delivery of secondary fracture prevention services, and to identify barriers and facilitators to changes.
Design: A service evaluation to identify each hospital’s current models of care and changes in service delivery. A qualitative study to identify barriers and facilitators to change. Health economics analysis to establish NHS costs and cost-effectiveness. A natural experimental study to determine clinical effectiveness of changes to a hospital’s model of care.
Setting: Eleven acute hospitals in a region of England.
Participants: Qualitative study – 43 health professionals working in fracture prevention services in secondary care.
Interventions: Changes made to secondary fracture prevention services at each hospital between 2003 and 2012.
Main outcome measures: The primary outcome is secondary hip fracture. Secondary outcomes include mortality, non-hip fragility fracture and the overall rate of hip fracture.
Data sources: Clinical effectiveness/cost-effectiveness analyses – primary hip fracture patients identified from (1) Hospital Episode Statistics (2003–13, n = 33,152); and (2) Clinical Practice Research Datalink (1999–2013, n = 11,243).
Results: Service evaluation – there was significant variation in the organisation of secondary fracture prevention services, including staffing levels, type of service model (consultant vs. nurse led) and underlying processes. Qualitative – fracture prevention co-ordinators gave multidisciplinary health professionals capacity to work together, but communication with general practitioners was challenging. The intervention was easily integrated into practice but some participants felt that implementation was undermined by under-resourced services. Making business cases for a service was particularly challenging. Natural experiment – the impact of introducing an orthogeriatrician on 30-day and 1-year mortality was hazard ratio (HR) 0.73 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.65 to 0.82] and HR 0.81 (95% CI 0.75 to 0.87), respectively. Thirty-day and 1-year mortality were likewise reduced following the introduction or expansion of a FLS: HR 0.80 (95% CI 0.71 to 0.91) and HR 0.84 (95% CI 0.77 to 0.93), respectively. There was no significant impact on time to secondary hip fracture. Health economics – the annual cost in the year of hip fracture was estimated at £10,964 (95% CI £10,767 to £11,161) higher than the previous year. The annual cost associated with all incident hip fractures in the UK among those aged ≥ 50 years (n = 79,243) was estimated at £1215M. At a £30,000 per quality-adjusted life-year threshold, the most cost-effective model was introducing an orthogeriatrician.
Conclusion: In hip fracture patients, orthogeriatrician and nurse-led FLS models are associated with reductions in mortality rates and are cost-effective, the orthogeriatrician model being the most cost-effective. There was no evidence for a reduction in second hip fracture. Qualitative data suggest that weaknesses lie in treatment adherence/monitoring, a possible reason for the lack of effectiveness on second hip fracture outcome. The effectiveness on non-hip fracture outcomes remains unanswered.
Future work: Reliable estimates of health state utility values for patients with hip and non-hip fractures are required to reduce uncertainty in health economic models. A clinical trial is needed to assess the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a FLS for non-hip fracture patients.
Funding: The National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Services and Delivery Research programme and the NIHR Musculoskeletal Biomedical Research Unit, University of Oxford.
Copyright © Queen’s Printer and Controller of HMSO 2016. This work was produced by Judge et al. under the terms of a commissioning contract issued by the Secretary of State for Health. This issue may be freely reproduced for the purposes of private research and study and extracts (or indeed, the full report) may be included in professional journals provided that suitable acknowledgement is made and the reproduction is not associated with any form of advertising. Applications for commercial reproduction should be addressed to: NIHR Journals Library, National Institute for Health Research, Evaluation, Trials and Studies Coordinating Centre, Alpha House, University of Southampton Science Park, Southampton SO16 7NS, UK.
Sections
- Plain English summary
 - Scientific summary
 - Chapter 1. Introduction
 - Chapter 2. Characterisation of secondary fracture prevention services at hospitals across a region of England, and identification of key changes in service delivery over the past 10 years
 - Chapter 3. Identifying the reasons why hospitals chose their specific model of service delivery and assessing barriers to change
 - Chapter 4. Data sources
 - Chapter 5. Clinical effectiveness of service models of care following hip fracture: natural experimental study
 - Chapter 6. Effect of national guidelines on rates of hip fracture, non-hip fracture and life expectancy using national data sets
 - Chapter 7. Primary care and hospital care costs for hip fracture patients
 - Chapter 8. Cost-effectiveness analysis of models of care for secondary prevention of hip fracture
 - Chapter 9. Dissemination to clinicians, NHS managers and patients
 - Chapter 10. Final conclusions
 - Acknowledgements
 - References
 - Appendix 1 Evaluation questionnaire
 - Appendix 2 Interview guide for qualitative interviews
 - Appendix 3 Medical codes for identifying hip fractures in the Clinical Practice Research Datalink
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        Appendix 4 Description of changes to orthogeriatric and fracture liaison service models of care as previously identified and described in 
Chapter 2  - Appendix 5 Baseline characteristics of cases (primary hip fracture patients)
 - Appendix 6 Baseline characteristics of controls
 - Appendix 7 Estimated impact of interventions using segmented linear regression (parsimonious) models on all primary hip fracture patients
 - Appendix 8 Estimated impact of interventions using segmented linear regression (full) models on all primary hip fracture patients
 - Appendix 9 Estimated impact of interventions using segmented linear regression (parsimonious) models on all primary hip fracture patients, stratified by sex
 - Appendix 10 Estimated impact of interventions using segmented linear regression (full) models on all primary hip fracture patients, stratified by sex
 - Glossary
 - List of abbreviations
 
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