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Which additional information, if true, about the patients who received sophisticated home equipment can be taken into account along with the information above to evaluate whether providing the equipment is likely to lead to a net decrease in the number of visits and hence the corresponding treatment costs?

Conclusion: Providing the home equipment is likely to lead to a net decrease in the number of visits and hence the corresponding treatment costs
Given,
1. Availability of equipment
2. Increasing costs of hospital

Assumption:
People are well trained to use the home equipment.

POE:
A. The proportion of patients who visited the hospital for post-operative care or treatment of chronic diseases versus those who visited to get trained on how to operate the equipment. Correct

It matches with our assumption.

B. The initial out of pocket costs borne by patients receiving the equipment to the costs borne by patients opting for post-operative care at the hospital. Incorrect

Out of Scope. Costs does not make any difference in conclusion.

C. Comparison of the time required to render post-operative care at home with that at the hospital. Incorrect

Duration of the time is irrelevant here.

D. The extent to which the patients who had sophisticated home equipment met their professional commitments. Incorrect

Professional commitments is out of scope.

E. The number of treatments that patients have to go through when using sophisticated home equipment versus that when visiting a hospital. Incorrect

Out of scope
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sharathnair14
With increasing costs of hospital visits and increased availability of sophisticated home equipment, it is expected that more and more people will receive post-operative treatment of chronic conditions at home. A recent survey, however, says otherwise. The survey discovered that the majority of respondents who recently received equipment for treatment at home reported no reduction in the number of hospital visits.

Which additional information, if true, about the patients who received sophisticated home equipment can be taken into account along with the information above to evaluate whether providing the equipment is likely to lead to a net decrease in the number of visits and hence the corresponding treatment costs?

A. The proportion of patients who visited the hospital for post-operative care or treatment of chronic diseases versus those who visited to get trained on how to operate the equipment.
This helps us understand whether post operative care in home can be feasible and whether the no of visits done by the patients can be reduced by teaching them the same therefore let us keep it

B. The initial out of pocket costs borne by patients receiving the equipment to the costs borne by patients opting for post-operative care at the hospital.
This doesn't help us give any long term perspective about anything therefore out

C. Comparison of the time required to render post-operative care at home with that at the hospital.
'Time' is a far fetched argument cannot be absolutely determiniastic since different people take different time and the time each patient has is different therefore out

D. The extent to which the patients who had sophisticated home equipment met their professional commitments.
Professional commitments is a long shot we have absolutely no clue as of what it indicates therefore out

E. The number of treatments that patients have to go through when using sophisticated home equipment versus that when visiting a hospital.
A better assess the situation therefore out

THerefore IMO A
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Explanation:
The core issue here is evaluating whether providing sophisticated home equipment can reduce hospital visits (and thus reduce costs). The survey said that hospital visits did not reduce, but we don’t yet know why.

✅ Why A is the best answer:
  • It directly addresses a possible explanation for the survey results.
  • If many hospital visits were just for training on how to use the new equipment (rather than for actual treatment), this would artificially inflate the number of hospital visits in the short term.
  • Once training is complete, visits may drop—suggesting the equipment could still lead to long-term cost savings.
  • This information would help distinguish between visits for learning the equipment vs. visits due to medical need, which is key to evaluating its effectiveness in reducing visits.

❌ Why the other options are wrong or less relevant:
B. The initial out-of-pocket costs borne by patients receiving the equipment vs. those receiving hospital care.
  • ❌ This relates to who pays and how much they pay, not the number of hospital visits.
  • We're evaluating net change in visits and treatment costs, not individual financial burdens.
C. Comparison of time required to render care at home vs. at hospital.
  • ❌ Time comparison doesn't tell us how many visits occurred or were avoided.
  • It's about efficiency or convenience, not about cost reduction via fewer visits.
D. The extent to which patients met professional commitments.
  • ❌ Irrelevant. Professional commitments (jobs, duties, etc.) are not related to healthcare cost or visit frequency.
  • It might be useful for quality-of-life studies but not for evaluating cost-effectiveness.
E. Number of treatments needed with equipment vs. hospital visits.
  • ❌ Looks useful at first, but it’s about the quantity of treatments, not how many hospital trips were required.
  • A patient could have many treatments at home but still make fewer hospital visits, which is what we care about.
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doesnt the cost affect the net decrease
like if my out of pocket costs is higher in case of equipment buying then i will go to the hospital
A just makes a formula out of the question
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rak08
doesnt the cost affect the net decrease
like if my out of pocket costs is higher in case of equipment buying then i will go to the hospital
A just makes a formula out of the question

See here the main concern is number of hospital visits, money is secondary, like if the equipment though costly but gives you higher comfort or is easy to use etc. then you might not prefer going to hospital and hence reduce the visits.
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