A Randomized Trial of Strategies for Assessing
Eligibility for Long-Term Domiciliary Oxygen Therapy
Rationale: Restricting oxygen administration to those who benefit
is desirable.
Objective: To determine the impact of alternative strategies
for assessing eligibility for domiciliary oxygen on funded oxygen
use, quality of life, and costs. Methods: We randomized applicants
for domiciliary oxygen therapy to an assessment system that relied
on data collected by oxygen providers at the time of application
and judgments by Home Oxygen Program personnel (conventional
assessment) or to a system of data collection by a respiratory therapist
that included, in patients unstable at the time of initial assessment,
a repeat assessment after 2 months of stability (alternative
assessment).
Measurements and Main Results: A total of 276 applicants
were allocated to the conventional arm and 270 to the alternative
assessment. In the year after application, oxygen use was lower
in the alternative arm with no between-group differences in mortality,
quality of life, or resource use in the community. Although
alternative assessment applicants had on average higher assessment
costs by $155 per applicant, these costs were more than offset
by decreased Home Oxygen Program costs of $596 per applicant
using Canadian cost weights. The comparable U.S. dollar figures
were $309 and $432, respectively, and the difference in cost between
strategies was therefore smaller using U.S. cost weights.
Conclusions: Reassessment of applicants for domiciliary oxygen after
several months of stability identifies an appreciable portion of initially
eligible patients who are no longer eligible, thus reducing
program costs to public funders without adverse consequences on
quality of life, mortality, or other resource use.
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