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How do child and adolescent mental health problems influence public sector costs? Interindividual variations in a nationally representative British sample

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posted on 2016-02-10, 11:11 authored by M. Knapp, T. Snell, A. Healey, S. Guglani, S. Evans-Lacko, J-L. Fernandez, Howard Meltzer, T. Ford
Background Policy and practice guidelines emphasize that responses to children and young people with poor mental health should be tailored to needs, but little is known about the impact on costs. We investigated variations in service-related public sector costs for a nationally representative sample of children in Britain, focusing on the impact of mental health problems. Methods Analysis of service uses data and associated costs for 2461 children aged 5–15 from the British Child and Adolescent Mental Health Surveys. Multivariate statistical analyses, including two-part models, examined factors potentially associated with interindividual differences in service use related to emotional or behavioural problems and cost. We categorized service use into primary care, specialist mental health services, frontline education, special education and social care. Results Marked interindividual variations in utilization and costs were observed. Impairment, reading attainment, child age, gender and ethnicity, maternal age, parental anxiety and depression, social class, family size and functioning were significantly associated with utilization and/or costs. Conclusions Unexplained variation in costs could indicate poor targeting, inequality and inefficiency in the way that mental health, education and social care systems respond to emotional and behavioural problems.

Funding

This article presents independent research funded from Department of Health (England) grant 035/0045 and Wellcome Clinical Fellowship GR056900MA.

History

Citation

Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 56:6 (2015), pp 667–676

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 56:6 (2015)

Publisher

Wiley for Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health (ACAMH)

issn

0021-9630

eissn

1469-7610

Acceptance date

2014-08-10

Copyright date

2014

Available date

2016-02-10

Publisher version

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jcpp.12327/abstract

Language

en

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