A. Dawson et al., Domiciliary midwifery support in high-risk pregnancy incorporating telephonic fetal heart rate monitoring: a health technology randomized assessment, J TELEMED T, 5(4), 1999, pp. 220-230
We conducted a health technology assessment of the care of women with high-
risk pregnancies in the South Wales valleys. Women in the control arm were
intended to receive conventional care with standard midwifery visits. Women
in the intervention arm received additional or longer visits and domicilia
ry fetal heart rate telemonitoring. Eighty-one mothers were randomized. The
re were significant differences in midwifery intervention resources between
domiciliary and control groups, with the former receiving a mean of 3.7 vi
sits lasting 33.5 min, compared with 1.4 visits lasting 12.8 min for the la
tter. There were slightly more spontaneous labours and fewer Caesarean sect
ions in the domiciliary group. Maternal satisfaction and anxiety were high
in both groups. Domiciliary care increased the service costs by pound 21.02
per woman in terms of extra midwife travel and visiting time, and by a fur
ther pound 18.38 per woman in home monitoring equipment costs. This, howeve
r, was more than offset by health service savings from fewer clinic visits
(pound 35.60) and fewer clinic ultrasound scans (pound 9.01). Adding the re
ductions in lost productivity to women and their partners (pound 34.51) sug
gests that domiciliary care was cheaper than conventional care, even if it
did not greatly reduce inpatient days (a reduction nonetheless saving pound
184.24). While clinical processes were similar in both groups, there were
useful practical advantages and savings for patients and the health service
from the domiciliary intervention.