Incorporating economic analysis in evidence-based guidelines for mental health: the profile approach
Background
Many western health systems are currently developing the role of clinical guidelines to promote effective and efficient health care. However, introducing economic data into guideline methodology designed to assess the effectiveness of interventions raises some methodological issues. These include providing valid and generalizable cost estimates, the weight placed upon cost ‘evidence’ and presenting cost-effectiveness information in a way that is helpful to clinicians.
Aim of the Study
To explore a framework for including economic concepts in the development of a series of primary care guidelines, two of which address mental health conditions.
Methods
A profile approach, setting out best available evidence about the attributes of treatment choices (effectiveness, tolerability, safety, health service delivery, quality of life, resource use and cost), was used to help clinicians to derive treatment recommendations in a manner consistent with both the clinical decision-making process and social objectives.
Results
Clinicians involved in guideline development responded well to the process. Although there was often considerable debate about the meaning and importance of different aspects of evidence about treatment, in none of the guideline groups was there failure to agree treatment recommendations.
Discussion
The profile approach may be particularly useful in the field of mental health where disease processes may often feature very disparate effects, over long periods of time and impacting upon a broad circle of relatives, carers and agencies in addition to the patients themselves.
Conclusion
A method has been applied in a series of primary care guidelines, which appears to enable clinicians to consider the issue of resource use alongside the various clinical attributes associated with treatment decisions. The basis of this work is the belief that guidance presenting physical measures describing effectiveness, adverse events, safety, compliance and quality of life, alongside resource consequences, is most likely to appropriately inform doctor–patient interactions.
Implications for Health Care Provision and Use
This research may provide a useful platform for other groups considering how to introduce cost-effectiveness concepts into guideline development groups. Whether guidelines change clinical behaviour remains a research question, and the subject of forthcoming trials.
Implications for Health policy Formulation
It is important that government agencies realize that guideline development is a health policy tool with prescribed methods to produce valid guidelines. Attempts to tamper with the methodology for cost-containment purposes or other political reasons are likely to discredit a useful mechanism for improving the scientific basis of health care provision.
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.