4.6 Article

Cost-Effectiveness of Comprehensive, Integrated Care for First Episode Psychosis in the NIMH RAISE Early Treatment Program

Journal

SCHIZOPHRENIA BULLETIN
Volume 42, Issue 4, Pages 896-906

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/schbul/sbv224

Keywords

schizophrenia; cost-effectiveness; quality adjusted life years

Categories

Funding

  1. American Recovery and Reinvestment Act
  2. National Institute of Mental Health [HHSN271200900019C]

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This study compares the cost-effectiveness of Navigate (NAV), a comprehensive, multidisciplinary, team-based treatment approach for first episode psychosis (FEP) and usual Community Care (CC) in a cluster randomization trial. Patients at 34 community treatment clinics were randomly assigned to either NAV (N = 223) or CC (N = 181) for 2 years. Effectiveness was measured as a one standard deviation change on the Quality of Life Scale (QLS-SD). Incremental cost effectiveness ratios were evaluated with bootstrap distributions. The Net Health Benefits Approach was used to evaluate the probability that the value of NAV benefits exceeded its costs relative to CC from the perspective of the health care system. The NAV group improved significantly more on the QLS and had higher outpatient mental health and antipsychotic medication costs. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was $ 12 081/QLS-SD, with a.94 probability that NAV was more cost-effective than CC at $ 40 000/QLS-SD. When converted to monetized Quality Adjusted Life Years, NAV benefits exceeded costs, especially at future generic drug prices.

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