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Medicare payments, healthcare service use, and telemedicine implementation costs in a randomized trial comparing telemedicine case management with usual care in medically underserved participants with diabetes mellitus (IDEATel)

Abstract

Objective
To determine whether a diabetes case management telemedicine intervention reduced healthcare expenditures, as measured by Medicare claims, and to assess the costs of developing and implementing the telemedicine intervention.

Design
We studied 1665 participants in the Informatics for Diabetes Education and Telemedicine (IDEATel), a randomized controlled trial comparing telemedicine case management of diabetes to usual care. Participants were aged 55 years or older, and resided in federally designated medically underserved areas of New York State.

Measurements
We analyzed Medicare claims payments for each participant for up to 60 study months from date of randomization, until their death, or until December 31, 2006 (whichever happened first). We also analyzed study expenditures for the telemedicine intervention over six budget years (February 28, 2000- February 27, 2006).

Results
Mean annual Medicare payments (SE) were similar in the usual care and telemedicine groups, $9040 ($386) and $9669 ($443) per participant, respectively (p>0.05). Sensitivity analyses, including stratification by censored status, adjustment by enrollment site, and semi-parametric weighting by probability of dropping-out, rendered similar results. Over six budget years 28 821 participant/months of telemedicine intervention were delivered, at an estimated cost of $622 per participant/month.

Conclusion
Telemedicine case management was not associated with a reduction in Medicare claims in this medically underserved population. The cost of implementing the telemedicine intervention was high, largely representing special purpose hardware and software costs required at the time. Lower implementation costs will need to be achieved using lower cost technology in order for telemedicine case management to be more widely used.

Palmas W, Shea S, Starren J, Teresi JA, Ganz ML, Burton TM, et al. Medicare payments, healthcare service use, and telemedicine implementation costs in a randomized trial comparing telemedicine case management with usual care in medically underserved participants with diabetes mellitus (IDEATel). J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2010 Mar 1;17(2):196-202.

2 March 2010

Bibliographic Data

Title:

Medicare payments, healthcare service use, and telemedicine implementation costs in a randomized trial comparing telemedicine case management with usual care in medically underserved participants with diabetes mellitus (IDEATel)

Author(s):

Palmas, Walter; Shea, Steven; Starren, Justin; Teresi, Jeanne A.; Ganz, Michael L.; Burton, Tanya M.; Pashos, Chris L.; Blustein, Jan; Field, Lesley; Morin, Philip C.; Izquierdo, Roberto E.; Silver, Stephanie; Eimicke, Joseph P.; Lantigua, Rafael A.; Weinstock, Ruth S.

Journal

J Am Med Inform Assoc, 17(2), pp. 196-202
(2010-03-01)

URL:

Full article

DOI:

10.1136/jamia.2009.002592

PMID:

20190064

Keyword(s):

Costs, Diabetes Mellitus, Implementation, Telemedicine, United States

Citation:
Palmas W, Shea S, Starren J, Teresi JA, Ganz ML, Burton TM, et al. Medicare payments, healthcare service use, and telemedicine implementation costs in a randomized trial comparing telemedicine case management with usual care in medically underserved participants with diabetes mellitus (IDEATel). J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2010 Mar 1;17(2):196-202.

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Miscellaneous

Affiliated University Institutes

Columbia University - College of Physicians and Surgeons - Department of Medicine, USA

Columbia University - Joseph Mailman School of Public Health - Department of Epidemiology, USA

Columbia University - Department of Biomedical Informatics, USA

Columbia University - Stroud Center, USA

New York University - Wagner Graduate School, USA

SUNY Upstate Medical University, USA

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PubMed

Walter Palmas
Ruth S. Weinstock
Rafael A. Lantigua
Joseph P. Eimicke
Stephanie Silver
Roberto E. Izquierdo
Philip C. Morin
Jan Blustein
Lesley Field
Chris L. Pashos
Michael L. Ganz
Tanya M. Burton
Jeanne A. Teresi
Justin Starren
Steven Shea

Google Scholar

Walter Palmas
Ruth S. Weinstock
Rafael A. Lantigua
Joseph P. Eimicke
Stephanie Silver
Roberto E. Izquierdo
Philip C. Morin
Jan Blustein
Lesley Field
Chris L. Pashos
Michael L. Ganz
Tanya M. Burton
Jeanne A. Teresi
Justin Starren
Steven Shea

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