Schizophrenia treatment in the developing world: an interregional and multinational cost-effectiveness analysis.

Journal: Bulletin of the World Health Organization

Volume: 86

Issue: 7

Year of Publication: 2008

Affiliated Institutions:  Department of Health Systems Financing, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland. ChisholmD@who.int

Abstract summary 

Schizophrenia is a highly disabling disease and is costly to treat. We set out to establish what are the most cost-effective interventions applicable to developing regions and countries.Analysis was undertaken at the level of three WHO subregions spanning the Americas, Africa and South-East Asia, and subsequently in three member states (Chile, Nigeria and Sri Lanka). A state transition model was used to estimate the population-level health impact of older and newer antipsychotic drugs, alone or in combination with psychosocial intervention. Total population-level costs (in international dollars or local currencies) and effectiveness (measured in disability-adjusted life years averted) were combined to form cost-effectiveness ratios.The most cost-effective interventions were those using older antipsychotic drugs combined with psychosocial treatment, delivered via a community-based service model (I$ 2350-7158 per disability-adjusted life year averted across the three subregions, I$ 1670-3400 following country-level contextualisation within each of these subregions). The relative cost-effectiveness of interventions making use of newer, "atypical" antipsychotic drugs is estimated to be much less favourable.By moving to a community-based service model and selecting efficient treatment options, the cost of substantially increasing treatment coverage is not high (less than I$ 1 investment per capita). Taken together with other priority-setting criteria such as disease severity, vulnerability and human rights protection, this study suggests that a great deal more could be done for persons and families living under the spectre of this disorder.

Authors & Co-authors:  Chisholm Dan D Gureje Oye O Saldivia Sandra S Villalón Calderón Marcelo M Wickremasinghe Rajitha R Mendis Nalaka N Ayuso-Mateos Jose-Luis JL Saxena Shekhar S

Study Outcome 

Source Link: Visit source

Statistics
Citations :  Mental health: new understanding, new hope Geneva: WHO; 2001.
Authors :  8
Identifiers
Doi : S0042-96862008000700014
SSN : 1564-0604
Study Population
Male,Female
Mesh Terms
Africa, Western
Other Terms
Study Design
Cross Sectional Study
Study Approach
Country of Study
Niger
Publication Country
Switzerland