AIM: To describe insomnia treatment in New Zealand and estimate the annual societal costs of insomnia among New Zealanders aged 20-59 years. METHOD: Twenty-one interviews were conducted with insomnia treatment providers in New Zealand using a snowballing recruitment method. Information from the interviews and the international literature was used to estimate treatment profiles, availability, uptake and costs, as the basis for a decision analytic model with micro costing of each potential outcome. Sensitivity analyses were conducted with 10,000 Monte Carlo simulations randomly varying between each model parameter between minimum and maximum estimates. RESULTS: The treatment provider interviews highlighted the unstructured nature of insomnia treatment in New Zealand. The net cost of treating a person with insomnia was estimated to be -$482. The net annual benefit (saving) for treating insomniacs aged between 20-59 yrs was estimated at $21.8 million. CONCLUSION: The estimated total societal costs per QALY gained by treating insomnia is substantially lower than the average QALY cost-effectiveness threshold ($6,865) of PHARMAC funding decisions for new pharmaceuticals. Thus, these analyses strongly support the cost-effectiveness of insomnia treatment.
AIM: To describe insomnia treatment in New Zealand and estimate the annual societal costs of insomnia among New Zealanders aged 20-59 years. METHOD: Twenty-one interviews were conducted with insomnia treatment providers in New Zealand using a snowballing recruitment method. Information from the interviews and the international literature was used to estimate treatment profiles, availability, uptake and costs, as the basis for a decision analytic model with micro costing of each potential outcome. Sensitivity analyses were conducted with 10,000 Monte Carlo simulations randomly varying between each model parameter between minimum and maximum estimates. RESULTS: The treatment provider interviews highlighted the unstructured nature of insomnia treatment in New Zealand. The net cost of treating a person with insomnia was estimated to be -$482. The net annual benefit (saving) for treating insomniacs aged between 20-59 yrs was estimated at $21.8 million. CONCLUSION: The estimated total societal costs per QALY gained by treating insomnia is substantially lower than the average QALY cost-effectiveness threshold ($6,865) of PHARMAC funding decisions for new pharmaceuticals. Thus, these analyses strongly support the cost-effectiveness of insomnia treatment.
Authors: Christina S McCrae; Adam D Bramoweth; Jacob Williams; Alicia Roth; Caterina Mosti Journal: J Clin Sleep Med Date: 2014-02-15 Impact factor: 4.062