Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Telemedicine in Rural Healthcare Systems
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.71465/bhsr54Keywords:
telemedicine, rural healthcare, cost-effectiveness, QALY, decision analysis, primary care, health economics, implementationAbstract
Telemedicine has emerged as a promising strategy to address geographic, workforce, and infrastructure constraints that limit access to care in rural regions. This paper presents a pragmatic cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) framework for rural health systems, focusing on primary-care consultations and chronic-disease follow-up. We develop a simple decision-analytic model that compares telemedicine to conventional in-person care from a health-system perspective over a one-year horizon. Cost categories include capital (hardware, connectivity, platform), operational (staff time, training, maintenance), and patient-incurred costs (travel and time). Effects are measured as additional consultations delivered, avoided referrals, and quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) proxied through improved guideline-concordant care. Scenario analysis shows telemedicine is cost-saving at moderate-to-high utilization due to reduced travel, better provider time allocation, and avoidance of unnecessary facility visits and referrals. At low utilization, fixed costs dominate and telemedicine can be more expensive per consultation. Threshold analysis highlights breakeven volumes and connectivity prices at which telemedicine switches from cost-increasing to cost-saving. We discuss implementation levers—workforce workflows, hub-and-spoke routing, device sharing, demand generation, and data governance—that improve value for money while safeguarding equity and quality. The results support scaling telemedicine in rural systems when paired with adequate throughput, training, and reimbursement alignment.
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