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Les coûts des modalités thérapeutiques
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Am J
Psychiatry. 2005 Sep;162(9):1628-1636. |
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Cost-Effectiveness of ADHD Treatments: Findings From the
Multimodal Treatment Study of Children With ADHD.
Jensen PS,
Garcia JA,
Glied S,
Crowe M,
Foster M,
Schlander M,
Hinshaw S,
Vitiello B,
Arnold LE,
Elliott G,
Hechtman L,
Newcorn JH,
Pelham WE,
Swanson J,
Wells K.
Center for the Advancement of Children's Mental Health,
Department of Child Psychiatry, New York State Psychiatric
Institute, Columbia University, 1051 Riverside Dr., Suite 78,
New York, NY 10032. pj131@columbia.edu.
OBJECTIVE: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a
costly public health problem. To the authors' knowledge, this is
the first study on the cost-effectiveness of the major forms of
ADHD treatments used in NIMH's Multimodal Treatment Study of
Children With ADHD (MTA Study). METHOD: Five hundred
seventy-nine children with ADHD, combined type, ages 7 to 9.9,
were assigned to 14 months of medication management, behavioral
treatment, both combined, or community care. Services were
tallied throughout the study, including medication, health care
visits, behavioral treatments, and rental costs. Provider
specialty, total time, and number of visits with providers were
used to calculate costs, adjusted to FY 2000 dollars with the
consumer price index. RESULTS: Treatment costs varied fourfold,
with medication management being the least expensive, followed
by behavioral treatment, and then combined treatment. Lower
costs of medication treatment were found in the community care
group, reflecting the less intensive (and less effective) nature
of community-delivered treatment. Medical management was more
effective but more costly than community care and more
cost-effective than combination treatment and behavioral
treatment alone. Under some conditions, combination treatment (medical
management and psychotherapy) were somewhat more cost-effective,
as demonstrated by lower costs per additional child "normalized"
among children with multiple comorbid disorders. CONCLUSIONS:
Medical management treatment, although not as effective as
combined medical management and behavioral treatment, is likely
to be more cost-effective in routine treatment for children with
ADHD, particularly those without comorbid disorders. For some
children with comorbid disorders, it may be cost-effective to
provide combination treatment.
PMID: 16135621 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
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