Intervention and societal costs of residential community reintegration for patients with acquired brain injury: a cost-analysis of the Brain Integration Programme.

Authors

  • Caroline M. van Heugten
  • Gert J. Geurtsen
  • R. Elze Derksen
  • Juan D. Martina
  • Alexander C. H. Geurts
  • Silvia M.A.A. Evers

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-0818

Keywords:

brain injuries, cost-analysis, rehabilitation, residential treatment, outcome.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to examine the intervention costs of a residential community reintegration programme for patients with acquired brain injury and to compare the societal costs before and after treatment. METHODS: A cost-analysis was performed identifying costs of healthcare, informal care, and productivity losses. The costs in the year before the Brain Integration Programme (BIP) were compared with the costs in the year after the BIP using the following cost categories: care consumption, caregiver support, productivity losses. Dutch guidelines were used for cost valuation. RESULTS: Thirty-three cases participated (72% response). Mean age was 29.8 years, 59% traumatic brain injury. The BIP costs were €68,400. The informal care and productivity losses reduced significantly after BIP (p < 0.05), while healthcare consumption increased significantly (p < 0.05). The societal costs per patient were €48,449. After BIP these costs were €39,773

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Published

2011-05-30

How to Cite

van Heugten, C. M., Geurtsen, G. J., Derksen, R. E., Martina, J. D., Geurts, A. C. H., & Evers, S. M. (2011). Intervention and societal costs of residential community reintegration for patients with acquired brain injury: a cost-analysis of the Brain Integration Programme. Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 43(7), 647–652. https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-0818

Issue

Section

Original Report