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. 2018 Aug 10;28(2):132–141. doi: 10.1136/bmjqs-2017-007505

Table 3.

Expected results of the base case cost-effectiveness analysis

Perspective Strategy Cost ΔCost Utility (QALYs) ΔUtility ICER* ($/QALY)
Societal Standard care $11 428 13.13
Risk-stratified prevention
 Braden <10 (very high risk) $11 410 −$18 13.16 0.03 Dominant
 Braden <13 (very high and high risk) $11 406 −$22 13.16 0.03 Dominant
 Braden <15 (very high, high and moderate risk) $11 404 −$24 13.19 0.06 Dominant
 Braden <19 (very high, high, moderate and at risk) $11 484 $56 13.22 0.09 $622
Prevention-for-all $11 668 $240 13.25 0.12 $2000
Health sector Standard care $10 786 13.13
Risk-stratified prevention
 Braden <10 (very high risk) $10 768 −$18 13.16 0.03 Dominant
 Braden <13 (very high and high risk) $10 763 −$23 13.16 0.03 Dominant
 Braden <15 (very high, high and moderate risk) $10 761 −$25 13.19 0.06 Dominant
 Braden <19 (very high, high, moderate  and at risk) $10 842 $56 13.22 0.09 $622
Prevention-for-all $11 025 $257 13.25 0.12 $2142

*ICER=(costa–costb)/(utilitya–utilityb); a ‘Dominant’ ICER refers to option ‘a’ being preferred to option ‘b’ based on resulting in a greater utility at lower cost, ie, cost saving.

ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; QALY, quality-adjusted life-year.