
%0 Journal Article
%T Health-related resource-use measurement instruments for intersectoral costs and benefits in the education and criminal justice sectors
%J Pharmacoeconomics
%D 2017
%A Mayer, Susanne
%A Paulus, Aggie T. G.
%A Łaszewska, Agata
%A Simon, Judit
%A Drost, Ruben M. W. A.
%A Ruwaard, Dirk
%A Evers, Silvia M. A. A.
%V 35
%N 9
%P 895-908
%X BACKGROUND: Intersectoral costs and benefits (ICBs), i.e. costs and benefits of healthcare interventions outside the healthcare sector, can be a crucial component in economic evaluations from the societal perspective. Pivotal to their estimation is the existence of sound resource-use measurement (RUM) instruments; however, RUM instruments for ICBs in the education or criminal justice sectors have not yet been systematically collated or their psychometric quality assessed. This review aims to fill this gap. <br><br>METHODS: To identify relevant instruments, the Database of Instruments for Resource Use Measurement (DIRUM) was searched. Additionally, a systematic literature review was conducted in seven electronic databases to detect instruments containing ICB items used in economic evaluations. Finally, studies evaluating the psychometric quality of these instruments were searched. <br><br>RESULTS: Twenty-six unique instruments were included. Most frequently, ICB items measured school absenteeism, tutoring, classroom assistance or contacts with legal representatives, police custody/prison detainment and court appearances, with the highest number of items listed in the Client Service Receipt Inventory/Client Sociodemographic and Service Receipt Inventory/Client Service Receipt Inventory-Children's Version (CSRI/CSSRI/CSRI-C), Studying the Scope of Parental Expenditures (SCOPE) and Self-Harm Intervention, Family Therapy (SHIFT) instruments. ICBs in the education sector were especially relevant for age-related developmental disorders and chronic diseases, while criminal justice resource use seems more important in mental health, including alcohol-related disorders or substance abuse. Evidence on the validity or reliability of ICB items was published for two instruments only. <br><br>CONCLUSION: With a heterogeneous variety of ICBs found to be relevant for several disease areas but many ICB instruments applied in one study only (21/26 instruments), setting-up an international task force to, for example, develop an internationally adaptable instrument is recommended.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>
%G en
%I Adis International
%@ 1170-7690
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40273-017-0522-4