| Literature DB >> 31064371 |
Stig Evensen1, Torbjørn Wisløff2,3, June Ullevoldsæter Lystad4, Helen Bull4, Egil W Martinsen4,5, Torill Ueland4,6, Erik Falkum4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Over the past decades research has shown that employment has a positive impact on quality of life, global functioning and recovery in individuals with schizophrenia. However, access to vocational rehabilitation services for this group is limited and unemployment rates remain high. In this study we explore the potential cost-effectiveness of a novel vocational rehabilitation program (The Job Management Program - JUMP) earmarked for individuals with schizophrenia in Norway.Entities:
Keywords: Cognitive behaviour therapy; Cognitive remediation; Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; Quality adjusted life years (QALY); Schizophrenia; Vocational rehabilitation
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31064371 PMCID: PMC6505225 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-019-2130-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Fig. 1Subject flow in the JUMP study; referrals, starters and participants consenting to cost-effectiveness analysis
Comparison on key baseline characteristics between JUMP and TAU
| JUMP ( | TAU ( | Test Statistics | Group comparison ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, mean (SD) | 33.2 (7.7) | 34.9 (9.1) | Ns | |
| Gender, male (%) | 45 (65.2%) | 65 (65.0%) | Ns | |
| Diagnosis | ||||
| Schizophrenia | 87.0% | 100.0% | . | |
| Schizoaffective disorder | 8.7% | 003 | ||
| Psychosis NOS | 1.4% | |||
| Delusional disorder | 2.9% | |||
Comparison on key variables between participants who consented to obtaining register data and participants who declined at two-year follow-up
| Consent ( | Declined ( | Test Statistics | Group comparison ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diagnosis | ||||
| Schizophrenia | 87.0% | 89.9% | ||
| Schizoaffective disorder | 8.7% | 6.3% | Ns | |
| Psychosis NOS | 1.4% | 2.5% | ||
| Delusional disorder | 2.9% | 1.3% | ||
| Age, mean (SD) | 33.2 (7.7) | 32.6 (8.2) | Ns | |
| Gender, male (%) | 45 (65.2%) | 58 (73.4%) | Ns | |
| Education, highest completed | 32.9% | |||
| Primary school | 30.4% | 38.0% | ||
| High school | 29.0% | 13.9% | Ns | |
| Trade school | 8.7% | 8.9% | ||
| College | 21.7% | 6.3% | ||
| University | 7.2% | |||
| Not completed primary school | 2.9% | |||
| Units of DDDb main anti-psychotic, mean (SD) | 1.1 (0.9) | 1.1 (0.7) | Ns | |
| Duration of illness, mean years (DOI) (SD) | 8.0 (6.7) | 6.5 (6.1) | Ns | |
| Previous work experience, mean months (SD) | 64.15 (65.32) | 66.69 (73.82) |
| Ns |
| Psychotic Symptoms (PANSS total) (SD) | 56.23 (15.35) | 60.19 (15.34) |
| Ns |
| Employment outcome | ||||
| Competitive employment | 23.2% | 21.4% | ||
| Work placement | 34.8% | 18.6% | ||
| Sheltered work | 13.0% | 15.7% | Ns | |
| Unemployed | 29.0% | 44.3% | ||
b Defined daily Dose (DDD)
Mean and median specialised mental health costs (€ 2015) for 24-month period at T0 and T1 (n JUMP = 69, n TAU = 100), and mean primary health and social care cost at T0 and T1 (JUMP)
| JUMP T0 | JUMP T1 | TAU T0 | TAU T1 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| € | SD | € | SD | € | SD | € | SD | |
| Inpatient services | 126,493 | 235,513 | 35,549 | 96,502 | 168,915 | 330,530 | 90,798 | 177,827 |
| Outpatient services | 13,853 | 15,128 | 16,988 | 24,656 | 6251 | 10,917 | 7982 | 12,851 |
| Total specialised mental health (mean) | 140,345 | 236,516 | 66,519 | 102,942 | 175,165 | 331,739 | 98,779 | 179,602 |
| Total specialised mental health (median + range) | 30,590 | 1,067,387 | 29,255 | 642,030 | 7658 | 1,082,098 | 20,920 | 1,025,296 |
| Primary health care | 515 | 746 | 426 | 552 | ||||
| Community care incl. Accommodation | 56,387 | 110,280 | 60,690 | 108,645 | ||||
| Medications | 2999 | 3443 | 2958 | 3329 | ||||
| Social security | 32,172 | 16,795 | 41,934 | 11,154 | ||||
| Intervention cost | 13,982 | 3154 | ||||||
| Total | 232,419 | 263,821 | 172,527 | 148,587 | ||||
Comparison of mental health service utilization between JUMP and TAU at T0 and T1
| JUMP ( | TAU ( | Test Statistics | Group comparison ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| T0 | ||||
| Days of hospitalisation T0 (SD) | 88.5 (164.8) | 118.4 (231.6) | Ns | |
| Days of day treatment T0 (SD) | .54 (2.5) | .28 (1.7) | Ns | |
| Outpatient visits T0 (SD) | 48.5 (53.4) | 22.0 (39.7) | <.001 | |
| T1 | ||||
| Days of hospitalisation T1 (SD) | 25.5 (69.3) | 64.6 (126.5) | .021 | |
| Days of day treatment T1 (SD) | 1.1 (8.0) | .51 (2.9) | Ns | |
| Outpatient visits T1 (SD) | 59.9 (89.6) | 28.1 (45.65) | .003 | |
a Based on bootstrap t-tests with 1000 samples
Effect of group (TAU vs JUMP), baseline costs and propensity score (age, sex, and baseline day treatment, inpatient and outpatient care) on treatment costs at T1 (GLM)
| Coeff | 95% CI | P | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Group – TAU vs JUMP | −10,621.64 | −29,979, 8735 | 0.282 |
| Baseline cost | .26 | .18, .35 | < 0.001 |
| Propensity score | 65,033.19 | −24,799, 154,865 | 0.156 |
Fig. 2The cost-effectiveness plane [48]