Comparison of Simulated Treatment and Cost-effectiveness of a Stepped Care Case-Finding Intervention vs Usual Care for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder After a Natural Disaster
Authored by Sandro Galea, Shailesh Tamrakar, Gregory H Cohen, Sarah Lowe, Laura Sampson, Catherine Ettman, Ben Linas, Kenneth Ruggiero
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2017.3037
Sponsors:
United States Department of Health and Human Services
Platforms:
C++
Microsoft Visual Studio
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Pseudocode
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
IMPORTANCE Psychiatric interventions offered after natural disasters
commonly address subsyndromal symptom presentations, but often remain
insufficient to reduce the burden of chronic posttraumatic stress
disorder (PTSD).
OBJECTIVE To simulate a comparison of a stepped care case-finding
intervention (stepped care [SC]) vs a moderate-strength single-level
intervention (usual care [UC]) on treatment effectiveness and
incremental cost-effectiveness in the 2 years after a natural disaster.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS This study, which simulated treatment
scenarios that start 4 weeks after landfall of Hurricane Sandy on
October 29, 2012, and ending 2 years later, created a model of 2 642 713
simulated agents living in the areas of New York City affected by
Hurricane Sandy.
INTERVENTIONS Under SC, cases were referred to cognitive behavioral
therapy, an evidence-based therapy that aims to improve symptoms through
problem solving and by changing thoughts and behaviors; noncases were
referred to Skills for Psychological Recovery, an evidence-informed
therapy that aims to reduce distress and improve coping and functioning.
Under UC, all patients were referred only to Skills for Psychological
Recovery.
MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The reach of SC compared with UC for 2 years,
the 2-year reduction in prevalence of PTSD among the full population,
the 2-year reduction in the proportion of PTSD cases among initial
cases, and 10-year incremental cost-effectiveness.
RESULTS This population of 2 642 713 simulated agents was initialized
with a PTSD prevalence of 4.38\%(115 751 cases) and distributions of sex
(52.6\% female and 47.4\% male) and age (33.9\% aged 18-34 years, 49.0\%
aged 35-64 years, and 17.1\% aged >= 65 years) that were comparable with
population estimates in the areas of New York City affected by Hurricane
Sandy. Stepped care was associated with greater reach and was superior
to UC in reducing the prevalence of PTSD in the full population:
absolute benefit was clear at 6 months (risk difference [RD], -0.004;
95\% CI, -0.004 to -0.004), improving through 1.25 years (RD, -0.015;
95\% CI, -0.015 to -0.014). Relative benefits of SC were clear at 6
months (risk ratio, 0.905; 95\% CI, 0.898-0.913), with continued gains
through 1.75 years (risk ratio, 0.615; 95\% CI, 0.609-0.662). The
absolute benefit of SC among cases was much stronger, emerging at 3
months (RD, -0.006; 95\% CI, -0.007 to -0.005) and increasing through
1.5 years (RD, -0.338; 95\% CI, -0.342 to -0.335). Relative benefits of
SC among cases were equivalent to those observed in the full population.
The incremental cost-effectiveness of SC compared with UC was \$3428.71
to \$6857.68 per disability-adjusted life year avoided, and \$0.80 to
\$1.61 per PTSD-free day.
CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE The results of this simulation study suggest
that SC for individuals with PTSD in the aftermath of a natural disaster
is associated with greater reach than UC, more effectiveness than UC,
and is well within the range of acceptability for cost-effectiveness.
Results should be considered in light of limitations inherent to
agent-based models.
Tags
health
Hurricane katrina
Trial
Cognitive-behavioral therapy
Preventive interventions
Collaborative
care
Population-impact
Sandy
Ptsd
Survivors