Economic evaluations of fall prevention exercise programs: a systematic review

Br J Sports Med. 2022 Dec;56(23):1353-1365. doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2022-105747. Epub 2022 Oct 27.

Abstract

Objective: To investigate cost-effectiveness and costs of fall prevention exercise programmes for older adults.

Design: Systematic review.

Data sources: Medline, Embase, Web of Science, Scopus, National Institute for Health Research Economic Evaluation Database, Health Technology Assessment database, Tufts Cost-Effectiveness Analysis Registry, Research Papers in Economics and EconLit (inception to May 2022).

Eligibility criteria for study selection: Economic evaluations (trial-based or model-based) and costing studies investigating fall prevention exercise programmes versus no intervention or usual care for older adults living in the community or care facilities, and reporting incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) for fall-related outcomes or quality-adjusted life years (QALY, expressed as cost/QALY) and/or intervention costs.

Results: 31 studies were included. For community-dwelling older adults (21 economic evaluations, 6 costing studies), results ranged from more effective and less costly (dominant) interventions up to an ICER of US$279 802/QALY gained and US$11 986/fall prevented (US$ in 2020). Assuming an arbitrary willingness-to-pay threshold (US$100 000/QALY), most results (17/24) were considered cost-effective (moderate certainty). The greatest value for money (lower ICER/QALY gained and fall prevented) appeared to accrue for older adults and those with high fall risk, but unsupervised exercise appeared to offer poor value for money (higher ICER/QALY). For care facilities (two economic evaluations, two costing studies), ICERs ranged from dominant (low certainty) to US$35/fall prevented (moderate certainty). Overall, intervention costs varied and were poorly reported.

Conclusions: Most economic evaluations investigated fall prevention exercise programmes for older adults living in the community. There is moderate certainty evidence that fall prevention exercise programmes are likely to be cost-effective. The evidence for older adults living in care facilities is more limited but promising.

Prospero registration number: PROSPERO 2020 CRD42020178023.

Keywords: Accidental Falls; Aged; Economics; Exercise; Review.

Publication types

  • Systematic Review
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Cost-Benefit Analysis
  • Exercise Therapy* / methods
  • Exercise*
  • Humans
  • Quality-Adjusted Life Years