학술논문

Cost-Effectiveness of Hypertension Treatment by Pharmacists in Black Barbershops.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Circulation. 6/15/2021, Vol. 143 Issue 24, p2384-2394. 11p.
Subject
*SYSTOLIC blood pressure
*DISCRETE event simulation
*BLOOD pressure
*BARBERSHOPS
*COST effectiveness
*ANTIHYPERTENSIVE agents
*HYPERTENSION
*RESEARCH
*RESEARCH methodology
*EVALUATION research
*COST benefit analysis
*PHARMACISTS
*OCCUPATIONS
*DRUG administration
*COMPARATIVE studies
*PSYCHOSOCIAL factors
*GENERIC drugs
*RESEARCH funding
*QUALITY-adjusted life years
*PHARMACODYNAMICS
Language
ISSN
0009-7322
Abstract
Background: In LABBPS (Los Angeles Barbershop Blood Pressure Study), pharmacist-led hypertension care in Los Angeles County Black-owned barbershops significantly improved blood pressure control in non-Hispanic Black men with uncontrolled hypertension at baseline. In this analysis, 10-year health outcomes and health care costs of 1 year of the LABBPS intervention versus control are projected.Methods: A discrete event simulation of hypertension care processes projected blood pressure, medication-related adverse events, fatal and nonfatal cardiovascular disease events, and noncardiovascular disease death in LABBPS participants. Program costs, total direct health care costs (2019 US dollars), and quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) were estimated for the LABBPS intervention and control arms from a health care sector perspective over a 10-year horizon. Future costs and QALYs were discounted 3% annually. High and intermediate cost-effectiveness thresholds were defined as <$50 000 and <$150 000 per QALY gained, respectively.Results: At 10 years, the intervention was projected to cost an average of $2356 (95% uncertainty interval, -$264 to $4611) more per participant than the control arm and gain 0.06 (95% uncertainty interval, 0.01-0.10) QALYs. The LABBPS intervention was highly cost-effective, with a mean cost of $42 717 per QALY gained (58% probability of being highly and 96% of being at least intermediately cost-effective). Exclusive use of generic drugs improved the cost-effectiveness to $17 162 per QALY gained. The LABBPS intervention would be only intermediately cost-effective if pharmacists were less likely to intensify antihypertensive medications when systolic blood pressure was ≥150 mm Hg or if pharmacist weekly time driving to barbershops increased.Conclusions: Hypertension care delivered by clinical pharmacists in Black barbershops is a highly cost-effective way to improve blood pressure control in Black men. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]