What Good Are Treatment Effects Without Treatment? Mental Health and the Reluctance to Use Talk Therapy

Author:

Cronin Christopher J1,Forsstrom Matthew P2,Papageorge Nicholas W3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Economics, University of Notre Dame

2. Department of Economics, Wheaton College

3. Department of Economics, Johns Hopkins University, IZA, and NBER

Abstract

Abstract Evidence across disciplines suggests that talk therapy is more curative than antidepressants for mild-to-moderate depression and anxiety. Yet, few patients use it. We develop a dynamic choice model to analyse patient demand for the treatment of depression and anxiety. The model incorporates myriad potential impediments to therapy use along with links between mental health improvements and earnings. The estimated model reveals that mental health improvements are valuable, directly through utility and indirectly through earnings. However, patient reluctance to use therapy is nearly impervious to reasonable counterfactual policies (e.g. lowering prices or removing other costs). Patient behaviour might reflect stigma, biases in beliefs about the effectiveness of therapy, or a distaste for discussing personal or painful issues with a stranger. More broadly, the benefits of therapy estimated in randomized trials tell only half the story. If patients do not use treatments outside of an experimental setting—and we fail to understand why or how to get them to—estimated treatment effects cannot be leveraged.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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