Economic evaluation and mental health: sparse past . . . fertile future?

Martin Knapp
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Copyright © 1999 John Wiley &amp; Sons, Ltd.</p>","PeriodicalId":46381,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Mental Health Policy and Economics","volume":"2 4","pages":"163-167"},"PeriodicalIF":1.0000,"publicationDate":"2000-05-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1002/(SICI)1099-176X(199912)2:4<163::AID-MHP64>3.0.CO;2-1","citationCount":"28","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Mental Health Policy and Economics","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/%28SICI%291099-176X%28199912%292%3A4%3C163%3A%3AAID-MHP64%3E3.0.CO%3B2-1","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 28

Abstract

Background: Demands for economic inputs to mental health policy-making, practice decisions and research evaluations have grown considerably in recent years, but the overall supply response has been modest and uneven.Aims: This paper examines the key historical phases in the development of mental health economics research, and what they imply for the way economics is received and employed. Focusing on the quest for cost-effectiveness, the paper considers challenges for mental health economics.Methods: An informal review of the growing demand for mental health economics (and how that demand has been expressed), and how economists have responded.Results: Five historical development phases characterize this growth. Initially, the dominant feature is innocence or neglect of scarcity. Cost measures are rarely calculated, cost-effectiveness is not part of the decision-making lexicon and the potential for inefficiency is huge.

In the second phase, innocence turns to criticism of attempts to introduce resource rationality, and many clinicians actively reject economics. Health is seen as priceless, and not to be compromised by the pursuit of efficiency.

After a period of reluctance there follows impetuosity as the need for economic insights is recognized, but the search for data is desperate and undiscriminating. Poor quality research is conducted, with the risk that decisions are misinformed and perhaps damaging. Once again, resources are inappropriately used.

Next follows the constructive development phase: previous mistakes are appreciated and the standards of evaluation improve markedly. Studies are better designed, more likely to be integrated into clinical or policy evaluations, carefully conducted and sensibly interpreted. Inefficiency should be reduced, along with inequity.

Finally, there is perhaps a nirvana-like fifth phase in which sophisticated economic studies are widely undertaken, where systematic reviews and meta-analyses help to reveal the wider picture and where findings are readily available to clinicians, managers and providers. Whether such a stage is attainable is open to question.Discussion: Although the number and sophistication of economic evaluations have both increased noticeably over recent years, there remain imbalances. There is little economics evidence on care arrangements or treatments for dementia, most of the neuroses and the disorders of childhood and adolescence. There are many fewer good evaluations of psychological interventions than of drug treatments. Geographically, few economic evaluations are conducted outside Western Europe, North America or Australasia.Implications for decision-makers and research: Many challenges consequently face the next generation of mental health economics evaluations, both for research economists and for those health care decision-makers who find themselves increasingly having to draw on economics evidence. One challenge is to be fully aware that the information that economists can currently offer may fall short of what decision-makers need. The gap between the two must be fully appreciated. Building more comprehensive pictures of the cost and outcome consequences of different care policies and treatment interventions is one way to bridge this gap.

At the same time a sense of perspective must be maintained and promoted. For example, there is growing concern across the world about the high prices of new drugs, yet drug acquisition costs usually represent only a small proportion of total costs. Decisions sometimes appear to be disproportionately focused on small parts of the overall mental health care picture. A similar tendency prompts another challenge, which is to undertake and interpret research so as to overcome, or at least not to exacerbate, the boundary problems that characterize the multi-service, multi-agency reality of many mental health care systems.

The adequacy of short-term evaluations—which dominate our field—must be questioned in light of the chronicity of many mental health problems, and of their externality effects (including inter-generational transmission of problems). Although funding will always be a problem, longer-term evidence is needed. So, too, is research that looks at the reasons for inter-individual cost and outcome variations. Economic evaluations should also pay more attention to equity as well as efficiency as a criterion of improved resource allocation. Finally, more economic data should be gathered alongside and not after clinical data, particularly as economic assumptions often appear to drive key practice and policy changes. Copyright © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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经济评估与心理健康:稀疏的过去。肥沃的未来?
背景:近年来,对心理健康政策制定、实践决策和研究评估的经济投入需求大幅增长,但总体供应反应温和且不均衡。目的:本文考察了心理健康经济学研究发展的关键历史阶段,以及它们对经济学的接受和运用方式意味着什么。本文着眼于追求成本效益,思考了心理健康经济学面临的挑战。方法:对心理健康经济学日益增长的需求(以及这种需求是如何表达的)以及经济学家的反应进行非正式审查。结果:这一增长经历了五个历史发展阶段。最初,主要特征是天真无邪或忽视稀缺性。很少计算成本指标,成本效益不在决策词汇中,效率低下的可能性很大。在第二阶段,清白转向了对引入资源理性的尝试的批评,许多临床医生积极拒绝经济学。健康被视为无价之宝,不能因追求效率而受损。在经历了一段时间的不情愿之后,随着对经济见解的需求得到认可,随之而来的是冲动,但对数据的搜索是绝望和无差别的。进行的研究质量很差,有决策被误导的风险,可能会造成损害。资源再次被不恰当地使用。接下来是建设性的发展阶段:对以前的错误表示赞赏,评估标准显著提高。研究设计得更好,更有可能纳入临床或政策评估,仔细进行并合理解释。应该减少效率低下和不公平现象。最后,也许还有一个类似涅盘的第五阶段,在这个阶段,复杂的经济研究被广泛进行,系统的审查和荟萃分析有助于揭示更广泛的情况,临床医生、管理人员和提供者可以随时获得研究结果。这样一个阶段是否能够实现还有待商榷。讨论:尽管近年来经济评估的数量和复杂程度都显著增加,但仍存在不平衡。关于痴呆症、大多数神经症以及儿童和青少年的疾病的护理安排或治疗,几乎没有经济学证据。与药物治疗相比,对心理干预的良好评价要少得多。从地理位置来看,在西欧、北美或澳大拉西亚以外很少进行经济评估。对决策者和研究的影响:因此,下一代心理健康经济学评估面临着许多挑战,无论是对研究经济学家还是那些发现自己越来越需要利用经济学证据的医疗保健决策者来说。一个挑战是要充分意识到,经济学家目前所能提供的信息可能达不到决策者的需求。必须充分认识到两者之间的差距。对不同护理政策和治疗干预措施的成本和结果后果建立更全面的了解是弥合这一差距的一种方法。与此同时,必须保持和促进一种视角感。例如,全世界都越来越担心新药的高价格,但药品采购成本通常只占总成本的一小部分。决策有时似乎不成比例地集中在整体心理健康护理的一小部分。类似的趋势引发了另一个挑战,即开展和解释研究,以克服或至少不加剧许多精神卫生保健系统的多服务、多机构现实所特有的边界问题。鉴于许多心理健康问题的长期性及其外部性影响(包括问题的代际传播),必须质疑短期评估的充分性。短期评估在我们的领域占据主导地位。尽管资金总是一个问题,但需要更长期的证据。研究个体间成本和结果差异的原因也是如此。经济评价还应更多地注意公平和效率,以此作为改进资源分配的标准。最后,应该在临床数据的同时而不是在临床数据之后收集更多的经济数据,特别是因为经济假设往往会推动关键的实践和政策变化。版权所有©1999 John Wiley&;有限公司。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
6.20%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: The Journal of Mental Health Policy and Economics publishes high quality empirical, analytical and methodologic papers focusing on the application of health and economic research and policy analysis in mental health. It offers an international forum to enable the different participants in mental health policy and economics - psychiatrists involved in research and care and other mental health workers, health services researchers, health economists, policy makers, public and private health providers, advocacy groups, and the pharmaceutical industry - to share common information in a common language.
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