The long-term cost-effectiveness of obesity prevention interventions: systematic literature review.

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The long-term cost-effectiveness of obesity prevention interventions: systematic literature review. / Lehnert, Thomas; Sonntag, Diana; Konnopka, Alexander; Riedel-Heller, S; König, Hans-Helmut.

in: OBES REV, Jahrgang 13, Nr. 6, 6, 2012, S. 537-553.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

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@article{5cc58478eb5843cba241bc01a0741988,
title = "The long-term cost-effectiveness of obesity prevention interventions: systematic literature review.",
abstract = "Obesity prevention provides a major opportunity to improve population health. As health improvements usually require additional and scarce resources, novel health technologies (interventions) should be economically evaluated. In the prevention of obesity, health benefits may slowly accumulate over time and it can take many years before an intervention has reached full effectiveness. Decision-analytic simulation models (DAMs), which combine evidence from diverse sources, can be utilized to evaluate the long-term cost-effectiveness of such interventions. This literature review summarizes long-term economic findings (defined as ? 40 years) for 41 obesity prevention interventions, which had been evaluated in 18 cost-utility analyses, using nine different DAMs. Interventions were grouped according to their method of delivery, setting and risk factors targeted into behavioural (n=21), community (n=12) and environmental interventions (n=8). The majority of interventions offered good value for money, while seven were cost-saving. Ten interventions were not cost-effective (defined as >50,000 US dollar), however. Interventions that modified a target population's environment, i.e. fiscal and regulatory measures, reported the most favourable cost-effectiveness. Economic findings were accompanied by a large uncertainty though, which complicates judgments about the comparative cost-effectiveness of interventions.",
keywords = "Humans, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Behavior Therapy, *Public Health, Anti-Obesity Agents/therapeutic use, Caloric Restriction, Obesity/*economics/*prevention & control, *Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Humans, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Behavior Therapy, *Public Health, Anti-Obesity Agents/therapeutic use, Caloric Restriction, Obesity/*economics/*prevention & control, *Quality-Adjusted Life Years",
author = "Thomas Lehnert and Diana Sonntag and Alexander Konnopka and S Riedel-Heller and Hans-Helmut K{\"o}nig",
year = "2012",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
pages = "537--553",
journal = "OBES REV",
issn = "1467-7881",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The long-term cost-effectiveness of obesity prevention interventions: systematic literature review.

AU - Lehnert, Thomas

AU - Sonntag, Diana

AU - Konnopka, Alexander

AU - Riedel-Heller, S

AU - König, Hans-Helmut

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - Obesity prevention provides a major opportunity to improve population health. As health improvements usually require additional and scarce resources, novel health technologies (interventions) should be economically evaluated. In the prevention of obesity, health benefits may slowly accumulate over time and it can take many years before an intervention has reached full effectiveness. Decision-analytic simulation models (DAMs), which combine evidence from diverse sources, can be utilized to evaluate the long-term cost-effectiveness of such interventions. This literature review summarizes long-term economic findings (defined as ? 40 years) for 41 obesity prevention interventions, which had been evaluated in 18 cost-utility analyses, using nine different DAMs. Interventions were grouped according to their method of delivery, setting and risk factors targeted into behavioural (n=21), community (n=12) and environmental interventions (n=8). The majority of interventions offered good value for money, while seven were cost-saving. Ten interventions were not cost-effective (defined as >50,000 US dollar), however. Interventions that modified a target population's environment, i.e. fiscal and regulatory measures, reported the most favourable cost-effectiveness. Economic findings were accompanied by a large uncertainty though, which complicates judgments about the comparative cost-effectiveness of interventions.

AB - Obesity prevention provides a major opportunity to improve population health. As health improvements usually require additional and scarce resources, novel health technologies (interventions) should be economically evaluated. In the prevention of obesity, health benefits may slowly accumulate over time and it can take many years before an intervention has reached full effectiveness. Decision-analytic simulation models (DAMs), which combine evidence from diverse sources, can be utilized to evaluate the long-term cost-effectiveness of such interventions. This literature review summarizes long-term economic findings (defined as ? 40 years) for 41 obesity prevention interventions, which had been evaluated in 18 cost-utility analyses, using nine different DAMs. Interventions were grouped according to their method of delivery, setting and risk factors targeted into behavioural (n=21), community (n=12) and environmental interventions (n=8). The majority of interventions offered good value for money, while seven were cost-saving. Ten interventions were not cost-effective (defined as >50,000 US dollar), however. Interventions that modified a target population's environment, i.e. fiscal and regulatory measures, reported the most favourable cost-effectiveness. Economic findings were accompanied by a large uncertainty though, which complicates judgments about the comparative cost-effectiveness of interventions.

KW - Humans

KW - Cost-Benefit Analysis

KW - Behavior Therapy

KW - Public Health

KW - Anti-Obesity Agents/therapeutic use

KW - Caloric Restriction

KW - Obesity/economics/prevention & control

KW - Quality-Adjusted Life Years

KW - Humans

KW - Cost-Benefit Analysis

KW - Behavior Therapy

KW - Public Health

KW - Anti-Obesity Agents/therapeutic use

KW - Caloric Restriction

KW - Obesity/economics/prevention & control

KW - Quality-Adjusted Life Years

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

VL - 13

SP - 537

EP - 553

JO - OBES REV

JF - OBES REV

SN - 1467-7881

IS - 6

M1 - 6

ER -