| Literature DB >> 31094355 |
Claudia Buntrock1, Fanny Kählke1, Filip Smit2,3,4, Matthias Berking1, Dirk Lehr5, Elena Heber6, Burkhardt Funk7, Heleen Riper2,8, David Daniel Ebert1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Work-related stress is widespread among employees and associated with high costs for German society. Internet-based stress management interventions (iSMIs) are effective in reducing such stress. However, evidence for their cost-effectiveness is scant.Entities:
Keywords: clinical trials, randomized; economic evaluation; internet; occupational stress; quality of life; work
Year: 2019 PMID: 31094355 PMCID: PMC6707573 DOI: 10.2196/10866
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Ment Health ISSN: 2368-7959
Average costs per participant (in €) by condition at 6-months follow-up (area under the curve, intention-to-treat-sample, N=264).
| Cost category | Internet-based stress management intervention (n=132), mean (SD) | Waitlist control condition (n=132), mean (SD) | Incremental costs, difference | |
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| Intervention | 299 (Reflects a fixed price) | 0 (Reflects a fixed price) | 299 |
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| Physician services | 132 (139) | 147 (175) | −15 |
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| Psychological services | 111 (291) | 209 (468) | −98 |
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| Hospital in-patient | 342 (2222) | 188 (1237) | 154 |
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| Hospital semiresidential | 234 (1444) | 77 (798) | 157 |
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| Rehabilitation | 8 (41) | 89 (658) | −81 |
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| Nonphysician services | 167 (293) | 174 (314) | −7 |
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| Prescription drugs | 50 (97) | 56 (105) | −6 |
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| Over the counter drugs | 48 (88) | 48 (78) | 0 |
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| Opportunity costs | 485 (754) | 526 (892) | −42 |
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| Travel expenses | 27 (48) | 49 (94) | −21 |
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| Domestic help or informal care | 424 (1213) | 665 (1327) | −241 |
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| Absenteeism | 1346 (2184) | 1655 (3436) | −309 |
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| Presenteeism | 1578 (1471) | 1756 (1849) | −178 |
| Total costs (€)a | 5258 (5493) | 5642 (6000) | −384 | |
aDue to rounding, numbers presented may not add up precisely to the totals provided.
Results of the main and sensitivity analysis based on 5000 bootstrap simulations. Costs are expressed in 2013 Euros.
| Analysis and outcome | Incremental costs, € (95% CI) | Incremental effects, points (95% CI) | Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, €/points (95% CI)a | Distribution over the cost-effectiveness plane, % | ||||
| North-east quadrantb | South-east quadrantc | South-west quadrantd | North-west quadrante | |||||
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| Perceived stress (range 0-40) | −386 (−1794 to 1006) | 6.27 (4.9 to 7.7)f | Dominant (dominant to 171) | 30 | 70 | —g | — |
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| Symptom-free status (0/1) | −386 (−1794 to 1006) | 0.362 (0.25 to 0.47)f | Dominant (dominant to 3360) | 30 | 70 | — | — |
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| QALYsh (range: 0-1) | −386 (−1794 to 1006) | 0.0074 (−0015 to 0.016) | Dominanti | 26 | 69 | 2 | 3 |
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| Perceived stress (range 0-40) | −616 (−1731 to 485) | 6.27 (4.9 to 7.7)f | Dominant (dominant to 81) | 13 | 87 | — | — |
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| Symptom-free status ( 0/1) | −616 (−1731 to 485) | 0.362 (0.25 to 0.47)f | Dominant (dominant to 1415) | 13 | 87 | — | — |
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| QALYs (range: 0-1) | −616 (−1731 to 485) | 0.0074 (−0015 to 0.016) | Dominanti | 12 | 83 | 2 | 3 |
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| Perceived stress (range 0-40) | −286 (−1694 to 1106) | 6.27 (4.9 to 7.7)f | Dominant (dominant to 187) | 34 | 66 | — | — |
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| Symptom-free status (0/1) | −286 (−1694 to 1106) | 0.362 (0.25 to 0.47)f | Dominant (dominant to 3419) | 34 | 66 | — | — |
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| QALYs (range: 0-1) | −286 (−1694 to 1106) | 0.0075 (−0015 to 0.016) | Dominanti | 31 | 64 | 2 | 3 |
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| Perceived stress (range 0-40) | −486 (−1894 to 906) | 6.27 (4.9 to 7.7)f | Dominant (dominant to 155) | 24 | 76 | — | — |
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| Symptom-free status (0/1) | −486 (−1894 to 906) | 0.362 (0.25 to 0.47)f | Dominant (dominant to 2764) | 24 | 76 | — | — |
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| QALYs (range: 0-1) | −486 (−1894 to 906) | 0.0075 (−0015 to 0.016) | Dominanti | 22 | 73 | 2 | 3 |
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| QALYs (range: 0-1) | −386 (−1794 to 1006) | 0.00186 (−0.010 to 0.014) | Dominanti | 49 | 14 | 22 | 16 |
aIn line with the best practice ISPOR guidelines on ‘Model Parameter Estimation and Uncertainty’ we did not report negative incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) as they are meaningless. Instead we used the term dominant which implies that the intervention has a higher effect and less cost compared with the WLC.
bThe north-east quadrant of the CE plane, indicating that intervention is more effective and more costly.
cThe south-east quadrant of the CE plane, indicating that intervention is more effective and less costly.
dThe south-west quadrant of the CE plane, indicating that intervention is less effective and less costly.
eThe north-west quadrant of the CE plane, indicating that intervention is less effective and more costly.
fP<.05.
gThe distribution of the ICERs (N=5000) sums to 100%. If the distribution only falls into 2 quadrants, there will not be any ICER in the other 2 quadrants (= 0%).
hQALYs: quality-adjusted life years.
iA dependably accurate 95% confidence interval for this distribution cannot be defined because there is no line through the origin that excludes alpha/2 of the distribution.
jSensitivity analysis 1 analyses not including in-patient care.
kSensitivity analysis 2 analyses adding €±100 of intervention costs.
lSensitivity analysis 3 analyses for EQ5D quality-adjusted life years.
Figure 1Scatterplot of 5000 replicates of the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (mean differences in costs and symptom-free status) on the cost-effectiveness plane: internet-based stress-management intervention versus waitlist control condition.
Figure 2Cost-effectiveness acceptability curve showing the probability of the internet-based stress-management intervention being cost-effective at varying willingness-to-pay ceilings (based on 5000 replicates of the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio using mean differences in costs and symptom-free status).
Figure 3Scatterplot of 5000 replicates of the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (mean differences in costs and quality-adjusted life years based on the Short-Form Six-Dimension) on the cost-effectiveness plane: internet-based stress-management intervention versus waitlist control condition. QALY: quality-adjusted life years; SF-6D: Short-Form Six-Dimension.
Figure 4Cost-effectiveness acceptability curve showing the probability of the internet-based stress-management intervention being cost-effective at varying willingness-to-pay ceilings (based on 5000 replicates of the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio using mean differences in costs and quality-adjusted life years based on the Short-Form Six-Dimension). QALY: quality-adjusted life years; SF-6D: Short-Form Six-Dimension.