Lifetime cost-effectiveness and equity impacts of the Healthy Primary School of the Future initiative

M Oosterhoff, EAB Over, A van Giessen… - BMC Public Health, 2020 - Springer
M Oosterhoff, EAB Over, A van Giessen, RT Hoogenveen, H Bosma, OCP van Schayck
BMC Public Health, 2020Springer
Background This study estimated the lifetime cost-effectiveness and equity impacts
associated with two lifestyle interventions in the Dutch primary school setting (targeting 4–12
year olds). Methods The Healthy Primary School of the Future (HPSF; a healthy school lunch
and structured physical activity) and the Physical Activity School (PAS; structured physical
activity) were compared to the regular Dutch curriculum (N= 1676). An adolescence model,
calculating weight development, and the RIVM Chronic Disease Model, calculating …
Background
This study estimated the lifetime cost-effectiveness and equity impacts associated with two lifestyle interventions in the Dutch primary school setting (targeting 4–12 year olds).
Methods
The Healthy Primary School of the Future (HPSF; a healthy school lunch and structured physical activity) and the Physical Activity School (PAS; structured physical activity) were compared to the regular Dutch curriculum (N = 1676). An adolescence model, calculating weight development, and the RIVM Chronic Disease Model, calculating overweight-related chronic diseases, were linked to estimate the lifetime impact on chronic diseases, quality adjusted life years (QALYs), healthcare, and productivity costs. Cost-effectiveness was expressed as the additional costs/QALY gained and we used €20,000 as threshold. Scenario analyses accounted for alternative effect maintenance scenarios and equity analyses examined cost-effectiveness in different socioeconomic status (SES) groups.
Results
HPSF resulted in a lifetime costs of €773 (societal perspective) and a lifetime QALY gain of 0.039 per child versus control schools. HPSF led to lower costs and more QALYs as compared to PAS. From a societal perspective, HPSF had a cost/QALY gained of €19,734 versus control schools, 50% probability of being cost-effective, and beneficial equity impact (0.02 QALYs gained/child for low versus high SES). The cost-effectiveness threshold was surpassed when intervention effects decayed over time.
Conclusions
HPSF may be a cost-effective and equitable strategy for combatting the lifetime burden of unhealthy lifestyles. The win-win situation will, however, only be realised if the intervention effect is sustained into adulthood for all SES groups.
Trial registration
Clinicaltrials.gov ( NCT02800616 ). Registered 15 June 2016 – Retrospectively registered.
Springer
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果

Google学术搜索按钮

example.edu/paper.pdf
搜索
获取 PDF 文件
引用
References