“The real-world economic impact of home-based video electroencephalography: the payer perspective”

Journal of Medical Economics

The study analyzed the economics of nearly 13,000 patients who received video-EEG and followed their claims data for the subsequent 12-month follow-up period. The authors concluded that VEEG procedures were approximately $10,000 less expensive in an outpatient vs inpatient cohort, and epilepsy-related healthcare costs were significantly lower during the follow-up period of 12 months after the procedure. 

 
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Ambulatory EEG: Crossing the divide during a pandemic

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Ambulatory Video-EEG Is Useful for Non-Urgent Diagnostic Evaluation of Events