Health economic evaluation of an internet intervention for depression (deprexis), a randomized controlled trial

Abstract Background Depressive disorders often remain undiagnosed or are treated inadequately. Online-based programs may reduce the present treatment gap for depressive disorders and reduce disease-related costs. This study aimed to examine the potential of the internet intervention “deprexis” to re...

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Main Authors: Viola Gräfe, Steffen Moritz, Wolfgang Greiner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-06-01
Series:Health Economics Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13561-020-00273-0
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spelling doaj-e5e3d5bead9b456c8f340be177976fd62020-11-25T03:11:46ZengBMCHealth Economics Review2191-19912020-06-0110111110.1186/s13561-020-00273-0Health economic evaluation of an internet intervention for depression (deprexis), a randomized controlled trialViola Gräfe0Steffen Moritz1Wolfgang Greiner2Department of Health Economics and Health Care Management, School of Public Health, Bielefeld UniversityDepartment of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University Medical Center Hamburg-EppendorfDepartment of Health Economics and Health Care Management, School of Public Health, Bielefeld UniversityAbstract Background Depressive disorders often remain undiagnosed or are treated inadequately. Online-based programs may reduce the present treatment gap for depressive disorders and reduce disease-related costs. This study aimed to examine the potential of the internet intervention “deprexis” to reduce the total costs of statutory health insurance. Changes in depression severity, health-related quality of life and impairment in functioning were also examined. Method A total of 3805 participants with, at minimum, mild depressive symptoms were randomized to either a 12-week online intervention (deprexis) or a control condition. The primary outcome measure was statutory health insurance costs, estimated using health insurers’ administrative data. Secondary outcomes were: depression severity, health-related quality of life, and impairment in functioning; assessed on patient’s self-report at baseline, post-treatment, and three-months’ and nine-months’ follow-up. Results In both groups, total costs of statutory health insurance decreased during the study period, but changes from baseline differed significantly. In the intervention group total costs decreased by 32% from 3139€ per year at baseline to 2119€ in the study year (vs. a mean reduction in total costs of 13% in the control group). In comparison to the control group, the intervention group also showed a significantly greater reduction in depression severity, and impairment in functioning and a significantly greater increase in health-related quality of life. Conclusion The study underlines the potential of innovative internet intervention programs in treating depressive disorders. The results suggest that the use of deprexis over a period of 12 weeks leads to a significant improvement in symptoms with a simultaneous reduction in the costs of statutory health insurance.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13561-020-00273-0Economic issuesOutcome studiesHealth economic evaluationE-mental-healthDeprexisDepression
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Viola Gräfe
Steffen Moritz
Wolfgang Greiner
spellingShingle Viola Gräfe
Steffen Moritz
Wolfgang Greiner
Health economic evaluation of an internet intervention for depression (deprexis), a randomized controlled trial
Health Economics Review
Economic issues
Outcome studies
Health economic evaluation
E-mental-health
Deprexis
Depression
author_facet Viola Gräfe
Steffen Moritz
Wolfgang Greiner
author_sort Viola Gräfe
title Health economic evaluation of an internet intervention for depression (deprexis), a randomized controlled trial
title_short Health economic evaluation of an internet intervention for depression (deprexis), a randomized controlled trial
title_full Health economic evaluation of an internet intervention for depression (deprexis), a randomized controlled trial
title_fullStr Health economic evaluation of an internet intervention for depression (deprexis), a randomized controlled trial
title_full_unstemmed Health economic evaluation of an internet intervention for depression (deprexis), a randomized controlled trial
title_sort health economic evaluation of an internet intervention for depression (deprexis), a randomized controlled trial
publisher BMC
series Health Economics Review
issn 2191-1991
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Abstract Background Depressive disorders often remain undiagnosed or are treated inadequately. Online-based programs may reduce the present treatment gap for depressive disorders and reduce disease-related costs. This study aimed to examine the potential of the internet intervention “deprexis” to reduce the total costs of statutory health insurance. Changes in depression severity, health-related quality of life and impairment in functioning were also examined. Method A total of 3805 participants with, at minimum, mild depressive symptoms were randomized to either a 12-week online intervention (deprexis) or a control condition. The primary outcome measure was statutory health insurance costs, estimated using health insurers’ administrative data. Secondary outcomes were: depression severity, health-related quality of life, and impairment in functioning; assessed on patient’s self-report at baseline, post-treatment, and three-months’ and nine-months’ follow-up. Results In both groups, total costs of statutory health insurance decreased during the study period, but changes from baseline differed significantly. In the intervention group total costs decreased by 32% from 3139€ per year at baseline to 2119€ in the study year (vs. a mean reduction in total costs of 13% in the control group). In comparison to the control group, the intervention group also showed a significantly greater reduction in depression severity, and impairment in functioning and a significantly greater increase in health-related quality of life. Conclusion The study underlines the potential of innovative internet intervention programs in treating depressive disorders. The results suggest that the use of deprexis over a period of 12 weeks leads to a significant improvement in symptoms with a simultaneous reduction in the costs of statutory health insurance.
topic Economic issues
Outcome studies
Health economic evaluation
E-mental-health
Deprexis
Depression
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13561-020-00273-0
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