Affiliation:
1. Monash University Health Economics Group, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine Monash University Melbourne Victoria Australia
2. Deakin Health Economics, Institute for Health Transformation, School of Health and Social Development Deakin University Burwood Victoria Australia
3. School of Public Health The University of Queensland Herston Queensland Australia
4. Queensland Centre for Mental Health Research Wacol Queensland Australia
Abstract
AbstractObjectiveThis systematic review updates an existing review examining the cost‐effectiveness of interventions to prevent and treat eating disorders (EDs).MethodLiterature search was conducted in Academic Search Complete, MEDLINE, CINAHL, PsycINFO, EconLit, Global Health, ERIC, Health Business Elite, and Health Policy Reference Center electronic databases, capturing studies published between March 2017 to April 2023. Hand‐searching was conducted as supplementary including gray literature search. Included articles were (1) full economic evaluations or return‐on‐investment studies, (2) in English and (3) aimed at prevention and treatment of any ED. Included studies were added and synthesized with previously reviewed studies. Screening and extraction followed PRISMA guidelines. Quality assessment was conducted using the Drummond checklist. PROSPERO registration CRD42021287464.ResultsA total of 28 studies were identified, including 15 published after the previous review. There were nine prevention, seven anorexia nervosa (AN) treatment, five bulimia nervosa (BN) treatment, four binge‐eating disorder (BED), and three non‐specific ED treatment studies. Findings indicate value‐for‐money evidence supporting all interventions. Quality assessment showed studies were fair‐to‐good quality.DiscussionThere has been significant growth in cost‐effectiveness studies over the last 5 years. Findings suggest that interventions to prevent and treat ED offer value for money. Interventions such as Featback (ED prevention and non‐specific ED treatment); focal psychodynamic therapy, enhanced cognitive behavioral therapy, and high‐calorie refeeding (AN treatment); stepped‐care with assisted self‐help and internet‐based cognitive behavioral therapy (BN treatment); and cognitive behavioral therapy guided self‐help intervention (BED treatment) have good quality economic evidence. Further research in implementation of interventions is required.Public Significance StatementThe increasing prevalence of ED globally has significant impact on healthcare systems, families, and society. This review is showcasing the value for money of interventions of eating disorders prevention and treatment. This review found that existing interventions offers positive economic benefit for the healthcare system.
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
1 articles.
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