2006
DOI: 10.1192/bjp.188.4.330
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Cost-effectiveness of preventing depression in primary care patients

Abstract: Over 1 year adjunctive minimal contact psychotherapy improved outcomes and generated lower costs. This intervention is therefore superior to usual care alone in terms of cost-effectiveness.

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Cited by 92 publications
(85 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
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“…This substantial shift toward more favorable views of mental health treatment suggests the intervention itself was very well received. However, the relatively low recruitment rate of 7 percent (vs 28%-40% in face-to-face recruitment models) suggests a selection bias may have played a role, supporting conjecture 2 [43][44]. However, these low recruitment rates may not be unusual for a fully online intervention and may be consistent with the finding that only 10 to 20 percent of adults are interested in an Internet-based lifestyle change at any given time [45][46].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 77%
“…This substantial shift toward more favorable views of mental health treatment suggests the intervention itself was very well received. However, the relatively low recruitment rate of 7 percent (vs 28%-40% in face-to-face recruitment models) suggests a selection bias may have played a role, supporting conjecture 2 [43][44]. However, these low recruitment rates may not be unusual for a fully online intervention and may be consistent with the finding that only 10 to 20 percent of adults are interested in an Internet-based lifestyle change at any given time [45][46].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 77%
“…These findings corroborate prior findings from cost-effectiveness analyses of (guided) bibliotherapy for depression (Smit et al, 2006;Vos, Corry, Haby, Carter, & Andrews, 2005) and binge-eating disorder (Lynch et al, 2010), although these interventions were based on cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). Economic evaluations of web-based self-help interventions (mostly CBT-based) for mental health are more abundant (Donker et al, 2015).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
“…Gerandomiseerd effectonderzoek laat zien dat met deze interventie depressiviteitsklachten worden verminderd, maar er konden geen effecten op de incidentie van depressie worden aangetoond (Allart-Van Dam, 2003 (Smit et al, 2006b; tekstblok 3.1).…”
Section: Geïndiceerde Preventie Van Depressie Bij Volwassenenunclassified
“…Er zijn nog vrijwel geen kosten-effectiviteits analyses (KEA's) gedaan voor de preventie van psychische stoornissen (De Wit et al, 2006). Een recente KEA van de zelfhulpcursus met minimale begeleiding voor sombere huisartspatiënten (Smit et al, 2006b; tekstblok 3.1) vormt daarop een uitzondering.…”
Section: Bijlage 6 Economische Effecten Van Preventieunclassified
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