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Assessing the Relationship Between Compliance with Antidepressant Therapy and Costs Among Employees in the United States

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 April 2020

H. Birnbaum
Affiliation:
Analysis Group, Inc, Boston, USA
R. Ben-Hamadi
Affiliation:
Analysis Group, Inc, Boston, USA
D. Kelley
Affiliation:
Analysis Group, Inc, Boston, USA
M. Hsieh
Affiliation:
Analysis Group, Inc, Boston, USA
B. Seal
Affiliation:
Sanofi-aventis US, Bridgewater, USA
P. Cremieux
Affiliation:
Analysis Group, Inc, Boston, USA
P. Greenberg
Affiliation:
Analysis Group, Inc, Boston, USA

Abstract

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Objective:

Assess effects of antidepressant compliance on healthcare and workplace costs.

Methods:

Using workplace survey data for 2 large employers’ healthcare claims (2004-2006), patient selection criteria considered depression diagnosis and antidepressant claims history. Employed respondents working in the past month were categorized by Medication Possession Ratio into compliance groups by quartiles; bottom/top quartiles were defined as compliant/non-compliant. Direct (medical/drug) costs were measured as insurer payments to providers; indirect (absenteeism/presenteeism) costs were based on one-month recall of workplace performance (hours worked/missed, self-rated performance), estimated as (hours missed x self-reported hourly income). Annualized, inflation-adjusted (2006) costs were compared between compliant/non-compliant groups using multivariate models controlling for baseline characteristics. Analyses were conducted for all patients and a subsample of diagnosed depression patients.

Results:

Among all patients (n=1,224), medical costs were numerically lower for compliant vs. non-compliant patients ($4,857 vs. $5,926, p=0.221); drug costs were significantly higher for compliant patients ($2,329 vs. $1,570, p=0.001). Indirect costs were not statistically different between compliant/non-compliant patients ($22,278 vs. $20,714, p=0.237). Among the depression subgroup (N=488), medical costs were numerically lower for compliant vs. non-compliant patients ($5,005 vs. $7,630, p=0.152) while drug costs were numerically higher for compliant patients ($2,550 vs. $1,829, p=0.153). Absenteeism costs were 30% lower for compliant patients ($7,725 vs. $11,040, p=0.038); presenteeism costs were not significantly different ($19,079 vs. $17,457, p=0.441).

Conclusions:

Absenteeism costs decrease significantly with compliance among depressed patients as do medical costs (not significantly). Further research is warranted regarding reason for poor antidepressant compliance and influence of compliance on costs.

Type
P01-110
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2009
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