Publication
Title
Cardiac telerehabilitation : a novel cost-efficient care delivery strategy that can induce long-term health benefits
Author
Abstract
Background: Finding innovative and cost-efficient care strategies that induce long-term health benefits in cardiac patients constitutes a big challenge today. The aim of this Telerehab III follow-up study was to assess whether a 6-month additional cardiac telerehabilitation programme could induce long-term health benefits and remain cost-efficient after the tele-intervention ended. Methods and results: A total of 126 cardiac patients first completed the multicentre, randomised controlled telerehabilitation trial (Telerehab III, time points t(0) to t(1)). They consequently entered the follow-up study (t(1)) with evaluations 2 years later (t(2)). A quantitative analysis of peak aerobic capacity (VO2 peak, primary endpoint), international physical activity questionnaire self-reported physical activity and HeartQoL quality of life (secondary endpoints) was performed. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was calculated. Even though a decline in VO2 peak (248ml/[min*kg] at t(1) and 226ml/[min*kg] at t(2); P <= 0.001) was observed within the tele-intervention group patients; overall they did better than the no tele-intervention group (P=0.032). Dividing the incremental cost (-(sic)878/patient) by the differential incremental quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) (0.22 QALYs) yielded an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of -(sic)3993/QALY. Conclusions: A combined telerehabilitation and centre-based programme, followed by transitional telerehabilitation induced persistent health benefits and remained cost-efficient up to 2 years after the end of the intervention. A partial decline of the benefits originally achieved did occur once the tele-intervention ended. Healthcare professionals should reflect on how innovative cost-efficient care models could be implemented in standard care. Future research should focus on key behaviour change techniques in technology-based interventions that enable full persistence of long-term behaviour change and health benefits.
Language
English
Source (journal)
European journal of preventive cardiology. - -
Publication
2017
ISSN
2047-4873
2047-4881
DOI
10.1177/2047487317732274
Volume/pages
24 :16 (2017) , p. 1708-1717
ISI
000414300500005
Pubmed ID
28925749
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
UAntwerpen
Faculty/Department
Research group
Publication type
Subject
Affiliation
Publications with a UAntwerp address
External links
Web of Science
Record
Identifier
Creation 11.12.2017
Last edited 09.10.2023
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