Table 2.
Cost data (base-case analysis)
| Age (years) | Valuea | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Costs of interventionb | w/m, €/year | ||
| 75 | 139/139 | [25, 28, 39, 40] | |
| 76 | 93/94 | ||
| 77 | 49/49 | ||
| 78 | 5/5 | ||
| 79+ | 0/0 | ||
| Costs of hip fracture treatmentc | €/fracture | ||
| Hospital care | All ages | 7280 | [42–44] |
| Revision | All ages | 961 | [42–45] |
| Rehabilitation | All ages | 2209 | [28, 44, 46–49] |
| Outpatient Care | All ages | 1114 | [44, 50–53] |
| Costs of long-term carec | w/m, €/6 months | ||
| Non-inst. (prior hip fracture) | 75–79 | 394/348 | [28, 36, 42, 54] |
| 80–84 | 831/651 | ||
| 85–80 | 1,60/1.221 | ||
| 90+ | 2550/2000 | ||
| Non-inst. (post hip fracture) | 75–79 | 990/918 | [28, 36, 42, 54] |
| 80–84 | 2264/2000 | ||
| 85–80 | 3274/2748 | ||
| 90+ | 4519/3764 | ||
| Nursing homed | All ages | 8516/8516 | [28, 54] |
Abbreviations. Non-inst. Non-institutionalized, w Women, m Men
aSince standard deviations were not available on the literature, we assumed a deviation of 40% for treatment costs and long-term care costs, and 50% for the intervention costs [55]
bIntervention costs decreas yearly by 28% due to decreasing adherence and additional by the age-specific care rate
cFor details on calculation see appendix Table A1 and A2
dLong-term care costs in the not-institutionalized setting were calculated by multiplying the age-specific care rate with an average value for long-term care costs (for details on calculation see appendix Table A3-A6)