4.7 Review

The cost-effectiveness of different types of educational interventions in type II diabetes mellitus: A systematic review

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2022.953341

Keywords

pharmacoeconomic; systematic review; diabetes mellitus; educational intervention; cost-effectiveness

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This systematic review assesses the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of educational interventions for improving self-efficacy in managing diabetes complications and lifestyle changes. The study found that all types of educational interventions were cost-effective, but determining the most effective type was difficult due to variations in reporting and methodology. The authors recommend standardized high-quality economic evaluations using a long-term societal perspective for educational interventions in type 2 diabetes.
Aims: Educational interventions are effective to improve peoples' self-efficacy in managing diabetes complications and lifestyle changes. This systematic review aims to assess and compare various aspects of educational interventions and to provide updated pharmacoeconomics data. Methods: Literature searches were conducted using databases such as EBSCOhost, Ovid, PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science. Outcomes such as study characteristics, costs, medication adherence, effectiveness and were narratively summarized, and the quality of each article was assessed. Results: A total of 27 studies were retrieved. The types of educational interventions were classified as face-to-face strategy, structured programs, telemedicine health education, a combination approach, and others. All types of educational interventions (N = 24, 89%) were reported to be cost-effective. The cost-effectiveness of the other two studies was considered to be not cost-effective while the outcome of one study could not be determined. The majority of the studies (N = 24, 89%) had moderate-quality evidence whereas thirteen (48%) studies were regarded to provide high-quality economic evaluations. Conclusion: All types of educational interventions are highly likely to be cost-effective. The quality of economic evaluations is moderate but the most cost-effective types of educational interventions could not be determined due to variations in the reporting and methodological conduct of the study. A high-quality approach, preferably utilizing the societal perspective over a long period, should be standardized to conduct economic evaluations for educational interventions in T2DM.

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