Publication: Cost-effectiveness of strategies to improve delivery of brief interventions for heavy drinking in primary care: results from the ODHIN trial.
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Identifiers
Date
2019
Authors
Angus, Colin
Li, Jinshuo
Romero-Rodriguez, Esperanza
Anderson, Peter
Parrott, Steve
Brennan, Alan
Advisors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Abstract
Screening and brief interventions (SBIs) for heavy drinking are an effective and cost-effective approach to reducing alcohol-related harm, yet delivery rates remain low. This study uses trial data to estimate the cost-effectiveness of alternative strategies to increase SBI delivery. Data from a large cluster-randomized trial were combined with the Sheffield Alcohol Policy Model, a policy appraisal tool, to estimate the cost-effectiveness of eight strategies to increase SBI delivery in primary care in England, Poland and the Netherlands: care as usual (control), training and support (TS), financial reimbursement (FR), referral of patients to an online brief intervention (eBI) and all combinations of TS, FR and eBI. cost-effectiveness was assessed from a healthcare perspective by comparing health benefits (measured in Quality-Adjusted Life Years) with total implementation costs and downstream healthcare savings for each strategy over a 30-year horizon and calculating Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs). All trialled strategies were cost-effective compared to control. TS combined with FR was the most cost-effective approach in England (more effective and less costly than control) and Poland (ICER €4632 vs. next-best strategy). This combination is not cost-effective in the Netherlands, where TS alone is the most cost-effective approach (ICER €3386 vs. next-best strategy). Structured TS, financial incentives and access to online interventions are all estimated to be cost-effective methods of improving delivery of alcohol brief interventions. TS and FR together may be the most cost-effective approach, however this is sensitive to country characteristics and alternative BI effect assumptions.
Description
MeSH Terms
Humans
Inservice training
Mass screening
Models, econometric
Motivation
Primary health care
Referral and consultation
Inservice training
Mass screening
Models, econometric
Motivation
Primary health care
Referral and consultation
DeCS Terms
Atención primaria de salud
Capacitación en servicio
Derivación y consulta
Modelos econométricos
Motivación
Tamizaje masivo
Capacitación en servicio
Derivación y consulta
Modelos econométricos
Motivación
Tamizaje masivo
CIE Terms
Keywords
Alcoholism, Cost-benefit analysis, Europe, Health behavior
Citation
Angus C, Li J, Romero-Rodriguez E, Anderson P, Parrott S, Brennan A. Cost-effectiveness of strategies to improve delivery of brief interventions for heavy drinking in primary care: results from the ODHIN trial. Eur J Public Health. 2019 Apr 1;29(2):219-225