4.5 Article

Societal costs of subclinical depressive symptoms in Dutch adolescents: a cost-of-illness study

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHILD PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY
Volume 63, Issue 7, Pages 771-780

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jcpp.13517

Keywords

Adolescence; depression; economic evaluation

Funding

  1. Dutch Organisation for Health research and Development (ZonMw) [729300012]

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This study investigated the cost-of-illness of subclinical depressive symptoms among adolescents in the Netherlands, finding that these symptoms cost the Dutch society more than euro42 million annually. The high societal costs and risk of future costs suggest the need for cost-effective prevention programmes.
Background Subclinical depressive symptoms are highly prevalent among adolescents and are associated with negative consequences, which may pose an economic burden for society. We conducted a prevalence-based cost-of-illness study using a societal perspective to investigate the cost-of-illness of subclinical depressive symptoms among adolescents. Methods Using a bottom-up approach, cost questionnaires were assessed to measure costs from 237 Dutch families with an adolescent aged 11-18 with subclinical depressive symptoms (of which 34 met the criteria of a depressive disorder). The study is registered in the Dutch Trial Register (Trial NL5584/NTR6176; ). Results Our calculations show that adolescents with subclinical depressive symptoms cost the Dutch society more than euro42 million annually, expressed in costs related to depressive symptoms. Secondary analyses were performed to test the reliability and stability of the costs. When costs related to psychological problems were considered, the annual costs amounted to euro67 million. The total societal costs related to physical problems amounted to approximately euro126 million. All costs combined (depressive, psychological, behavioural and physical problems and other reasons) amounted to a euro243 million. Total costs were highest for physical-related problems of the adolescent (52% of the total costs), followed by psychological (28%), depressive (17%) and behavioural problems (1%). Using an international prevalence rate, societal costs related to depressive symptoms resulted in euro54 million a year. Conclusions Cost-effective prevention programmes seem warranted given the high societal costs and risk of future costs as subclinical depressive symptoms could be a precursor of clinical depression later in life.

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