Cost-effectiveness of alternative changes to a national blood collection service

Transfusion Medicine
S WillisRichard Grieve

Abstract

To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of changing opening times, introducing a donor health report and reducing the minimum inter-donation interval for donors attending static centres. Evidence is required about the effect of changes to the blood collection service on costs and the frequency of donation. This study estimated the effect of changes to the blood collection service in England on the annual number of whole-blood donations by current donors. We used donors' responses to a stated preference survey, donor registry data on donation frequency and deferral rates from the INTERVAL trial. Costs measured were those anticipated to differ between strategies. We reported the cost per additional unit of blood collected for each strategy versus current practice. Strategies with a cost per additional unit of whole blood less than £30 (an estimate of the current cost of collection) were judged likely to be cost-effective. In static donor centres, extending opening times to evenings and weekends provided an additional unit of whole blood at a cost of £23 and £29, respectively. Introducing a health report cost £130 per additional unit of blood collected. Although the strategy of reducing the minimum inter-donation interval had the lowes...Continue Reading

References

Sep 30, 1998·Health Economics·M M van der Pol, J A Cairns
Jul 26, 2003·Transfusion Medicine·S J Varney, J F Guest
Dec 11, 2007·Transfusion Medicine·O MarantidouA Maniatis
Dec 28, 2007·Health Policy·Korina Katsaliaki
Dec 7, 2010·Transfusion·Harshal Lowalekar, N Ravichandran
May 28, 2013·Lancet·Lorna M Williamson, Dana V Devine
Sep 12, 2017·Health Services Research and Managerial Epidemiology

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Citations

Apr 13, 2019·Transfusion Medicine·D J Roberts, L J Estcourt

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Methods Mentioned

BETA
blood collection
blood

Software Mentioned

INTERVAL

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