The Cost-Effectiveness of Psychosocial Interventions Following Self-Harm in Australia

Author:

Krysinska Karolina1ORCID,Andriessen Karl1ORCID,Bandara Piumee2ORCID,Reifels Lennart1ORCID,Flego Anna1ORCID,Page Andrew2,Schlichthorst Marisa1ORCID,Pirkis Jane1ORCID,Mihalopoulos Cathrine3,Khanh-Dao Le Long3

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Mental Health, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, The University of Melbourne, VIC, Australia

2. Translational Health Research Institute, Western Sydney University, NSW, Australia

3. Health Economics Division, Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia

Abstract

Abstract: Background Psychosocial interventions following self-harm in adults, in particular cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), can be effective in lowering the risk of repeated self-harm. Aims To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of CBT for reducing repeated self-harm in the Australian context. Method The current study adopted the accessing cost-effectiveness (ACE) approach using return-on-investment (ROI) analysis. Uncertainty and sensitivity analyses (Sas) tested the robustness of the model outputs to changes in three assumptions: general practitioner referral pathway (SA1), private setting intervention delivery (SA2), and training costs (SA3). Results The intervention produced cost savings of A$ 46M (95% UI −223.7 to 73.3) and A$ 18.3M (95% UI −86.2 to 24.6), subject to the effect of intervention lasting 2- or 1-year follow-up. The ROI ratio reduced to 5.22 in SA1 (95% UI −10.1 to 27.9), 2.5 in SA2 (95% UI −4.8 to 13.3), and 5.1 in SA3 (95% UI −9.8 to 27.8). Limitations We assumed that the effectiveness would reduce 50% within 5 years in the base case, and we used Australian data and a partial social perspective. Conclusions The current study demonstrated cost-effectiveness of CBT for adults who have self-harmed with the return-on-investment ratio of A$ 2.3 to $6.0 for every A$ 1 invested.

Publisher

Hogrefe Publishing Group

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

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