Projects per year
Abstract
Background
Evaluations of the impact of interventions for resource allocation purposes commonly focus on health status. There is, however, also concern about broader impacts on wellbeing and, increasingly, on a person's capability. This study aims to compare the impact on health status and capability of seven major health conditions, and highlight differences in treatment priorities when outcomes are measured by capability as opposed to health status.
Methods
The study was a cross-sectional four country survey (n = 6650) of eight population groups: seven disease groups with: arthritis, asthma, cancer, depression, diabetes, hearing loss, and heart disease and one health population ‘comparator’ group. Two simple self-complete questionnaires were used to measure health status (EQ-5D-5L) and capability (ICECAP-A). Individuals were classified by illness severity using condition-specific questionnaires. Effect sizes were used to estimate: (i) the difference in health status and capability for those with conditions, relative to a healthy population; and (ii) the impact of the severity of the condition on health status and capability within each disease group.
Findings
5248 individuals were included in the analysis. Individuals with depression have the greatest mean reduction in both health (effect size, 1.26) and capability (1.22) compared to the healthy population. The effect sizes for capability for depression are much greater than for all other conditions, which is not the case for health. For example, the arthritis group effect size for health (1.24) is also high and similar to that of depression, whereas for the same arthritis group, the effect size for capability is much lower than that for depression (0.55). In terms of severity within disease groups, individuals categorised as 'mild' have similar capability levels to the healthy population (effect sizes <0.2, excluding depression) but lower health status than the healthy population (≥0.4).
Conclusion
Significant differences exist in the relative effect sizes across diseases when measured by health status and capability. In terms of treating morbidity, a shift in focus from health gain to capability gain would increase funding priorities for patients with depression specifically and severe illnesses more generally.
Original language | English |
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Article number | e0143590 |
Pages (from-to) | 1 |
Number of pages | 15 |
Journal | PLoS ONE |
Volume | 10 |
Issue number | 12 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2 Dec 2015 |
Keywords
- Capability approach
- EQ-5D
- Health economics
- depression
- Outcome measurement
- ICECAP
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Dive into the research topics of 'The relative impacts of disease on health status and capability wellbeing : a multi-country study'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 1 Finished
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Developing a broader measure for economic evaluation
Coast, J.
29/09/08 → 28/03/11
Project: Research Councils