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Preventing postnatal maternal mental health problems using a psychoeducational intervention: The cost-effectiveness of What Were We Thinking
Version 2 2024-06-18, 16:47Version 2 2024-06-18, 16:47
Version 1 2019-09-17, 12:01Version 1 2019-09-17, 12:01
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posted on 2024-06-18, 16:47 authored by J Ride, P Lorgelly, T Tran, Karen WynterKaren Wynter, H Rowe, J Fisher© 2016 Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. Objectives: Postnatal maternal mental health problems, including depression and anxiety, entail a significant burden globally, and finding cost-effective preventive solutions is a public policy priority. This paper presents a cost-effectiveness analysis of the intervention, What Were We Thinking (WWWT), for the prevention of postnatal maternal mental health problems. Design: The economic evaluation, including cost-effectiveness and cost-utility analyses, was conducted alongside a cluster-randomised trial. Setting: 48 Maternal and Child Health Centres in Victoria, Australia. Participants: Participants were English-speaking first-time mothers attending participating Maternal and Child Health Centres. Full data were collected for 175 participants in the control arm and 184 in the intervention arm. Intervention: WWWT is a psychoeducational intervention targeted at the partner relationship, management of infant behaviour and parental fatigue. Outcome measures: The evaluation considered public sector plus participant out-of-pocket costs, while outcomes were expressed in the 30-day prevalence of depression, anxiety and adjustment disorders, and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). Incremental costs and outcomes were estimated using regression analyses to account for relevant sociodemographic, prognostic and clinical characteristics. Results: The intervention was estimated to cost $A118.16 per participant. The analysis showed no statistically significant difference between the intervention and control groups in costs or outcomes. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratios were $A36 451 per QALY gained and $A152 per percentage-point reduction in 30-day prevalence of depression, anxiety and adjustment disorders. The estimate lies under the unofficial cost-effectiveness threshold of $A55 000 per QALY; however, there was considerable uncertainty surrounding the results, with a 55% probability that WWWT would be considered cost-effective at that threshold. Conclusions: The results suggest that, although WWWT shows promise as a preventive intervention for postnatal maternal mental health problems, further research is required to reduce the uncertainty over its cost-effectiveness as there were no statistically significant differences in costs or outcomes.
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BMJ OpenVolume
6Article number
ARTN e012086Location
EnglandPublisher DOI
Open access
- Yes
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2044-6055eISSN
2044-6055Language
EnglishPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2016, The AuthorsIssue
11Publisher
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