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预防是否值得?针对有心理健康问题儿童的学校干预措施的成本及潜在成本节约情况

Does Prevention Pay? Costs and Potential Cost-savings of School Interventions Targeting Children with Mental Health Problems.

作者信息

Wellander Lisa, Wells Michael B, Feldman Inna

机构信息

Department of Women's and Children's Health, Uppsala University, CHAP, MUNIN, 751 85 Uppsala, Sweden,

出版信息

J Ment Health Policy Econ. 2016 Jun;19(2):91-101.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

In Sweden, the local government is responsible for funding schools in their district. One funding initiative is for schools to provide students with mental health problems with additional support via extra teachers, personal assistants, and special education classes. There are evidence-based preventive interventions delivered in schools, which have been shown to decrease the levels of students' mental health problems. However, little is known about how much the local government currently spends on students' mental health support and if evidence-based interventions could be financially beneficial.

AIMS OF THE STUDY

The aim of this study was to estimate the costs of providing additional support for students' mental health problems and the potential cost-offsets, defined as reduced school-based additional support, if two evidence-based school interventions targeting children's mental health problems were implemented in routine practice.

METHODS

This study uses data on the additional support students with mental health problems received in schools. Data was collected from one school district for students aged 6 to 16 years. We modeled two Swedish school interventions, Comet for Teachers and Social and Emotional Training (SET), which both had evidence of reducing mental health problems. We used a cost-offset analysis framework, assuming both interventions were fully implemented throughout the whole school district. Based on the published studies, the expected effects and the costs of the interventions were calculated. We defined the cost-offsets as the amount of predicted averted additional support for students with ongoing mental health problems who might no longer require receiving services such as one-on-one time with an extra teacher, a personal assistant, or to be placed in a special education classroom. A cost-offset analysis, from a payer's perspective (the local government responsible for school financing), was conducted comparing the costs of both interventions with the potential cost-savings due to a reduction in the prevalence of mental health problems and averted additional support required.

RESULTS

The school district was comprised of 6,256 students, with 310 students receiving additional support for their mental health problems. Of these, 143 received support in their original school due to either having ADHD (n = 111), psychosocial problems (n = 26), or anxiety/depression (n = 6). The payers' total cost of additional support was 2,637,850 Euro per school year (18,447 Euro per student). The cost of running both interventions for the school district was 953,643 Euro for one year, while the potential savings for these interventions were estimated to be 627,150 Euro. The estimated effects showed that there would be a reduction of students needing additional support (25 for ADHD, eight for psychosocial problems, and one for anxiety/depression), and the payer would receive a return on their invested resources in less than two years (1.5 years) after implementation.

DISCUSSION

Preventive school interventions can both improve some children's mental health problems and be financially beneficial for the payer. However, they are still limited in their scope of reducing all students' mental health statuses to below clinical cut-offs; therefore, the preventive school interventions should be used as a supplement, but not a replacement, to current practices.

IMPLICATIONS FOR HEALTH POLICIES

The findings have political and societal implications, in that payers can reallocate their funds toward preventive measures targeting students' mental health problems, while reducing the costs.

IMPLICATIONS FOR FUTURE RESEARCH

When evaluating public health actions, it is necessary to consider their economic impact. The resources are scarce and the decision makers need knowledge on how to allocate their resources in an efficient way. Cost-offset analysis is seen as one way for decision makers to comprehend research findings; however, such analyses tend to not include the full benefits of the interventions, and actual impacts need to be fully evaluated in routine implementation.

摘要

背景

在瑞典,地方政府负责为本地区的学校提供资金。一项资金投入举措是让学校通过额外的教师、个人助理和特殊教育课程,为有心理健康问题的学生提供额外支持。学校实施了基于证据的预防性干预措施,这些措施已被证明可以降低学生心理健康问题的水平。然而,对于地方政府目前在学生心理健康支持方面的支出情况,以及基于证据的干预措施在经济上是否有益,人们了解得很少。

研究目的

本研究的目的是估计为学生心理健康问题提供额外支持的成本,以及如果在常规实践中实施两项针对儿童心理健康问题的基于证据的学校干预措施,潜在的成本抵消情况,即减少校内额外支持。

方法

本研究使用了学校中患有心理健康问题的学生获得额外支持的数据。数据收集自一个学区6至16岁的学生。我们对两项瑞典学校干预措施进行了建模,即教师彗星计划(Comet for Teachers)和社会情感训练(Social and Emotional Training,SET),这两项措施都有减少心理健康问题的证据。我们使用了成本抵消分析框架,假设这两项干预措施在整个学区全面实施。根据已发表的研究,计算了干预措施的预期效果和成本。我们将成本抵消定义为对仍有心理健康问题但可能不再需要接受诸如与额外教师一对一辅导、个人助理服务或进入特殊教育班级等服务的学生,预测可避免的额外支持金额。从付款方(负责学校资金的地方政府)的角度进行了成本抵消分析,比较了两项干预措施的成本与因心理健康问题患病率降低和避免额外支持需求而可能节省的成本。

结果

该学区共有6256名学生,其中310名学生因心理健康问题获得了额外支持。在这些学生中,143名在原学校接受支持,原因是患有注意力缺陷多动障碍(ADHD,n = 111)、心理社会问题(n = 26)或焦虑/抑郁(n = 6)。付款方提供额外支持的总成本为每学年2637850欧元(每名学生18447欧元)。该学区实施这两项干预措施一年的成本为953643欧元,而这些干预措施的潜在节省金额估计为627150欧元。估计效果显示,需要额外支持的学生人数将会减少(ADHD减少25人,心理社会问题减少8人,焦虑/抑郁减少1人),付款方在实施后不到两年(1.5年)就能从投入的资源中获得回报。

讨论

预防性学校干预措施既能改善一些儿童的心理健康问题,又对付款方在经济上有益。然而,它们在将所有学生的心理健康状况降低到临床临界值以下的范围仍然有限;因此,预防性学校干预措施应作为当前做法的补充,而不是替代。

对卫生政策的启示

这些发现具有政治和社会意义,即付款方可以将资金重新分配到针对学生心理健康问题的预防措施上,同时降低成本。

对未来研究的启示

在评估公共卫生行动时,有必要考虑其经济影响。资源稀缺,决策者需要了解如何以有效的方式分配资源。成本抵消分析被视为决策者理解研究结果的一种方式;然而,此类分析往往没有包括干预措施的全部益处,实际影响需要在常规实施中进行全面评估。

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