Economic Evaluation of Internet-Based Psychological Interventions: A Scoping Review of Methodological Choices

Abstract

Objectives

Internet-based psychological interventions hold promise for cost-effectiveness; yet, their evaluation lacks standardization, potentially leading to methodological discrepancies and inconclusive results. This study aims to conduct a scoping review of economic methods used when evaluating these interventions.

Methods

Articles published between January 2015 and December 2020 were retrieved from PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, CINAHL, ECONLIT, and PsychINFO. Two reviewers independently screened titles, abstracts, and full texts of relevant publications and extracted prespecified data. Outcomes related to intervention characteristics, comparators, perspective, time horizon, costs, benefits, economic endpoints, and uncertainty analysis methods were retrieved and synthetized narratively.

Results

We identified 703 references and included 85. Seventy-four of them included a cost-utility analysis and 58 a cost-effectiveness analysis, with 47 carrying out both. The comparator was treatment as usual in 52 studies (61.2%) but varied widely across studies. A societal perspective was adopted in 60 studies, supplemented by a healthcare perspective in half. Time horizon was 1 year or less in 68 articles (80.0%). Intervention costs (71/85 studies) predominantly covered delivery costs (45/71 studies), whereas development and promotional costs were infrequently considered (respectively, 14 and 5/71 studies). Interventions’ reach, opportunity costs, user engagement, and equity issues were rarely addressed. Key factors influencing cost-effectiveness included perspective, time horizon, costs included, and methods for handling missing data.

Conclusions

Assessment of cost-effectiveness in internet-based psychological interventions shows variability, potentially affecting efficiency evidence. Conventional methods are often favored overlooking digital tools’ specificities. Tailored guidelines for such evaluations could be helpful for standardized and reliable evidence.

Authors

Amira J. Hariz Karine Chevreul Laure Daval Mathilde Husson Corinne Alberti Morgane Michel

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