| Literature DB >> 30499217 |
Rui Duarte1, Annette Lloyd2, Eleanor Kotas1, Lazaros Andronis3,4, Ross White5.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Acceptance and mindfulness-based interventions (A/MBIs) are recommended for people with mental health conditions. Although there is a growing evidence base supporting the effectiveness of different A/MBIs for mental health conditions, the economic case for these interventions has not been fully explored. The aim of this systematic review was to identify and appraise all available economic evidence of A/MBIs for the management of mental health conditions.Entities:
Keywords: acceptance and mindfulness-based interventions; cost-effectiveness; economic evaluations; mental health; mindfulness; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30499217 PMCID: PMC6588093 DOI: 10.1111/bjc.12208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Clin Psychol ISSN: 0144-6657
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria (if all of the following met) | Exclusion criteria (if any of the following met) |
|---|---|
| 1. Intervention was an A/MBI | 4. Design/protocol paper, methodological paper, (systematic) review, meta‐analysis, commentaries/editorial |
| 2. Intervention was targeted at adults with mental health disorders as described in the DSM‐5 | 5. Insufficient information (e.g., study only available as a conference proceeding/abstract) |
| 3. Full or partial economic evaluation |
A/MBI = acceptance‐ and mindfulness‐based intervention; DSM = Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.
Figure 1PRISMA flow chart detailing the study selection process.
General characteristics of the economic evaluations included
| Author (year) Country | Condition | Intervention | Comparator(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Amner ( | EUPD symptoms and characteristics such as emotional dysregulation and recent self‐harming behaviours (during the previous 12 months) ( | DBT weekly sessions over 1 year comprising a two and a half hourly educational training group focusing on the acquisition of psycho‐social skills, combined with individual hour‐long sessions with a suitably trained therapist | UC (treatment received in the year prior to engagement in DBT) |
| Finnes | Mental health disorders including anxiety disorder, depression, reaction to severe stress, or adjustment disorder ( | ACT comprising six individual 60‐min sessions | ACT+WDI (intervention + three meetings involving the participant and his or her supervisor at work); WDI alone (three meetings involving the participant and his or her supervisor at work); UC (any intervention or consultation as offered by the primary care centre or other care facility; typically CBT and/or pharmacological treatments but also physical therapy and counselling |
| Knight | Mental health issues (described as people referred by their physician for a variety of mental health issues) ( | MBSR, 10‐weeks programme consisted of nine weekly 3‐hr group classes, daily homework assignments, and one 7‐hr class | UC (health service use before participation in the MBSR programme) |
| Kuyken | Depression (three or more previous episodes of depression and on maintenance antidepressant medication for at least the previous 6 months) ( | MBCT delivered in primary care settings with groups of 9–15 patients, 2‐hr sessions over 8 consecutive weeks, followed by four follow‐up sessions in the following year, and antidepressant tapering/discontinuation support (discussion with physicians after 4–5 weeks of the MBCT groups) | Maintenance antidepressant treatment monitored and treated by their physicians in primary care settings. During the maintenance phase, physicians were asked to manage antidepressant treatment in line with standard clinical practice and the BNF |
| Kuyken, Hayes, Barrett, Byng, Dalgleish, Kessler, Lewis, Watkins, Brejcha, | Depression (three or more previous major depressive episodes, recurrent major depressive disorder in full or partial remission, and on a therapeutic dose of maintenance antidepressant) ( | MBCT consisting of eight 2.25‐hr group sessions, normally over consecutive weeks, with four refresher sessions offered roughly every 3 months for the following year, and antidepressant tapering/discontinuation support | Maintenance antidepressant treatment, patients received support from their GPs to maintain a therapeutic level of antidepressant medication in line with BNF and NICE guidelines |
| Pasieczny and Connor ( | EUPD; BPD according to DSM‐IV‐TR criteria; all patients had at least one additional DSM axis 1 comorbid diagnosis, most commonly substance use disorders (51%), depressive disorders (77%), bipolar affective disorder (6%), PTSD (23%), other anxiety disorders (50%), and schizophrenia (4%) ( | DBT taking place over 6 months and consisting of weekly individual psychotherapy (1 h), weekly group skills training (2 h), access to phone coaching between sessions, and therapist attendance at a weekly DBT consultation meeting (1.5 h) | UC consisting of engagement, ongoing assessment, planning, linking with community resources, consultation with carers, assistance expanding social networks, collaboration with medical staff, advocacy, individual counselling, living skills training, psycho‐education, and crisis management |
| Priebe | EUPD (5 days or more with self‐harm in the year prior to treatment, and a diagnosis of at least one personality disorder; the majority of patients (91%) have a diagnosis of EUPD) ( | DBT consisting of weekly hour‐long individual therapy sessions, a weekly 2‐hr skills training group, and out‐of‐hours skills coaching over the telephone as needed during 12 months | UC which may have included treatment from psychotherapists, psychiatrists, community mental health teams, counsellors, GPs, or user‐run support groups |
| Shawyer | Depression (three or more previous major depressive episodes, recurrent major depressive disorder) ( | MBCT consisting of eight 2‐hr group training sessions delivered weekly and 3‐monthly optional ‘booster sessions’; and depressive relapse active monitoring consisting of monthly supported self‐monitoring using the Patient Health Questionnaire‐2 and ‐9 | Depressive relapse active monitoring alone which involved monthly supported self‐monitoring using the Patient Health Questionnaire‐2 and Patient Health Questionnaire‐9 |
| van Ravesteijn | MUS (patients fulfilled the DSM‐IV criteria of an undifferentiated somatoform disorder) ( | MBCT consisting of eight 2.5‐hr group sessions from experienced mindfulness trainers. Participants were instructed to practice at home 6 days a week for approximately 45 min a day | EUC provided by their GP and other health care professionals. It is considered EUC as all patients received a psychiatric interview and the GP was explicitly informed about the psychiatric diagnoses resulting from the interview |
| Wagner | EUPD (patients included if they met at least five BPD criteria according to DSM‐IV‐TR) ( | DBT with all patients receiving weekly individual therapy (50 Min), 89.4% of patients participated in a weekly skills training group (120 Min), telephone coaching was offered as needed and about 85% of the therapists participated in a weekly or biweekly consultation team (50 min). After the DBT treatment year, there was an option to continue individual therapy if indicated. | UC concerned the treatment received in the year before DBT |
ACT = acceptance and commitment therapy; BNF = British National Formulary; BPD = borderline personality disorder; CBT = cognitive behavioural therapy; DBT = dialectical behaviour therapy; DSM = Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders; EUC = enhanced usual care; EUPD = emotionally unstable personality disorder; GPs = general practitioners; MBCT = mindfulness‐based cognitive therapy; MBSR = mindfulness‐based stress reduction; MUS = medically unexplainable symptoms; NICE = National Institute for Health and Care Excellence; PTSD = post‐traumatic stress disorder; UC = usual care; WDI = workplace dialogue intervention.
Methods employed in the economic evaluations included
| Author (year) | Perspective | Type of economic evaluation (analytic method employed) | Time horizon (discounting and rate) | Main cost categories and year of valuation | Measure of benefit (instrument) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amner ( | Health care system | CC (before–after study) | 36 months (discounting not performed) |
Treatment‐ and hospital care‐related costs 1‐year before, during, and 1‐year after DBT | N/A |
| Finnes | Health care system and societal | CUA (trial‐based economic evaluation) | 12 months (discounting N/A) |
Intervention costs and health care costs impacted by the interventions and sickness benefits | QALY (EQ‐5D‐3L) |
| Knight | Third‐party payer | CC (matched‐control database study) | 48 months (discounting not performed) |
Claims submitted by physicians, emergency department visits, and inpatient discharges | N/A |
| Kuyken | Health care system and societal | CEA (trial‐based economic evaluation) | 15 months (discounting not performed) |
Hospital and community health and social services, plus productivity losses resulting from time off work due to illness | Relapse prevented and depression‐free day |
| Kuyken, | Health care system and societal | CEA, CUA (trial‐based economic evaluation) | 24 months (3.5% per year for costs and outcomes) |
Hospital and community health and social services, plus productivity losses |
Relapse/recurrence prevented |
| Pasieczny and Connor ( | Health care system | CCA (trial‐based economic evaluation) | 6 months (discounting N/A) |
Treatment‐ and hospital care‐related costs | Frequency of suicide attempts and decrease of NSSI |
| Priebe | Societal | CEA (trial‐based economic evaluation) | 12 months (discounting N/A) |
Hospital and social services and lost work days | Decrease in self‐harm rates |
| Shawyer | Health care system and societal | CEA, CUA (trial‐based economic evaluation) | 24 months (3% per year for costs) |
Hospital and community health and social service contacts. Productivity losses resulting from days off work |
Depression‐free day |
| van Ravesteijn | Health care system and societal | CUA (trial‐based economic evaluation) | 12 months (discounting N/A) |
Hospital and community health and social services, plus productivity losses resulting from work absence | QALY (SF‐6D) |
| Wagner | Societal | CC (before–after study) | 36 months (discounting not performed) |
Medical and non‐medical resource consumption, informal care (including significant others volunteering to take over domestic tasks without payment) and productivity loss | N/A |
CC = cost comparison; CCA = cost‐consequence analysis; CEA = cost‐effectiveness analysis; CUA = cost‐utility analysis; DALY = disability‐adjusted life year; N/A = not applicable; QALY = quality‐adjusted life year; NSSI = non‐suicidal self‐injury.
Findings of the economic evaluations included
| Author (year) | Main findings |
|---|---|
| Amner ( |
DBT results in a cost‐saving of £36,551 between Years 1 (prior to DBT) and 3 (after DBT) as a result of reduced health service use |
| Finnes |
|
| Knight | The mean OHIP cost for the cases dropped by $244 to $279, whilst the mean costs for the controls increased between $3 and $18 |
| Kuyken |
|
| Kuyken, |
|
| Pasieczny and Connor ( |
DBT resulted in a saving of $5927 per patient when compared to UC |
| Priebe | £36 to achieve a one percentage point reduction in the incidence of self‐harm as a result of using DBT |
| Shawyer |
|
| van Ravesteijn |
|
| Wagner | Total mean annual EUPD‐related societal cost‐of‐illness was €28,026 during pre‐treatment, €18,758 during the DBT treatment year and €14,750 during the follow‐up year |
DALY = disability‐adjusted life year; DBT = dialectical behaviour therapy; EUPD = emotionally unstable personality disorder; ICER = incremental cost‐effectiveness ratio; MBCT = mindfulness‐based cognitive therapy; NSSI = non‐suicidal self‐injury; OHIP = Ontario Health Insurance Plan; QALY = quality‐adjusted life year; UC = usual care; WTP = willingness to pay.