1. Expected Organizational Costs for Inserting Prevalence Information Into Lumbar Spine Imaging Reports
- Author
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Brian W. Bresnahan, Pradeep Suri, Judith A. Turner, Laura S. Gold, Janna L. Friedly, Karen J. Sherman, David F. Kallmes, Brent Griffith, Sean D. Rundell, Andrew L. Avins, Kathryn T. James, Patrick J. Heagerty, Larry Kessler, Jeffrey G. Jarvik, Patrick H. Luetmer, and Eric N. Meier
- Subjects
Research design ,Lumbar Vertebrae ,Cost estimate ,Total cost ,business.industry ,Lumbosacral Region ,Guideline ,medicine.disease ,Article ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Intervention (counseling) ,Health care ,Costs and Cost Analysis ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Medical emergency ,Medical prescription ,business ,Average cost - Abstract
Background Modifying physician behavior to more closely align with guideline-based care can be challenging. Few effective strategies resulting in appropriate spine-related health care have been reported. The Lumbar Imaging With Reporting of Epidemiology (LIRE) intervention did not result in reductions in spine care but did in opioid prescriptions written. Objectives To estimate organizational resource needs and costs associated with implementing a pragmatic, decision support-type intervention that inserted age- and modality-matched prevalence information for common lumbar spine imaging findings, using site-based resource use data from the LIRE trial. Research design Time and cost estimation associated with implementing the LIRE intervention in a health organization. Subjects Providers and patients assessed in the LIRE trial. Measures Expected personnel costs required to implement the LIRE intervention. Results Annual salaries were converted to daily average per person costs, ranging from $400 to $2,200 per day (base case) for personnel (range: $300-$2,600). Estimated total average cost for implementing LIRE was $5,009 (range: $2,651-$12,020), including conducting pilot testing with providers. Costs associated with a small amount of time for a radiologist (6-12 hours) and imaging-ordering providers (1-8 hours each) account for approximately 75% of the estimated total cost. Conclusions The process of implementing an intervention for lumbar spine imaging reports containing age- and modality-appropriate epidemiological benchmarks for common imaging findings required radiologists, imaging-ordering providers, information technology specialists, and limited testing and monitoring. The LIRE intervention seems to be a relatively low-cost, evidence-based, complementary tool that can be easily integrated into the reporting of spine imaging.
- Published
- 2021