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Review

A Scoping Review of Economic Evaluations to Inform the Reorientation of Preventive Health Services in Australia

by
Rachael Taylor
1,2,
Deborah Sullivan
1,
Penny Reeves
1,
Nicola Kerr
3,
Amy Sawyer
3,
Emma Schwartzkoff
3,
Andrew Bailey
4,
Christopher Williams
4,5 and
Alexis Hure
1,2,*
1
Health Economics and Impact, Hunter Medical Research Institute, New Lambton Heights, NSW 2305, Australia
2
School of Medicine and Public Health, College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing, University of Newcastle, University Drive, Callaghan, NSW 2308, Australia
3
Health Promotion, Mid North Coast Local Health District, Coffs Harbour, NSW 2450, Australia
4
Research and Knowledge Translation Directorate, Mid North Coast Local Health District, Port Macquarie, NSW 2444, Australia
5
University Centre for Rural Health, School of Health Sciences, University of Sydney, 61 Uralba Street, Lismore, NSW 2480, Australia
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20(12), 6139; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20126139
Submission received: 28 April 2023 / Revised: 22 May 2023 / Accepted: 6 June 2023 / Published: 15 June 2023

Abstract

:
The Australian National Preventive Health Strategy 2021–2030 recommended the establishment of evidence-based frameworks to enable local public health services to identify strategies and interventions that deliver value for money. This study aimed to review the cost-effectiveness of preventive health strategies to inform the reorientation of local public health services towards preventive health interventions that are financially sustainable. Four electronic databases were searched for reviews published between 2005 and February 2022. Reviews that met the following criteria were included: population: human studies, any age or sex; concept 1: primary and/or secondary prevention interventions; concept 2: full economic evaluation; context: local public health services as the provider of concept 1. The search identified 472 articles; 26 were included. Focus health areas included mental health (n = 3 reviews), obesity (n = 1), type 2 diabetes (n = 3), dental caries (n = 2), public health (n = 4), chronic disease (n = 5), sexual health (n = 1), immunisation (n = 1), smoking cessation (n = 3), reducing alcohol (n = 1), and fractures (n = 2). Interventions that targeted obesity, type 2 diabetes, smoking cessation, and fractures were deemed cost-effective, however, more studies are needed, especially those that consider equity in priority populations.

1. Introduction

Driven by the unsustainable burden of chronic disease, a shift is occurring within healthcare systems globally from curative, treatment-focused health towards preventive health. The preventive health approach aims to improve the health and well-being of a population by “reducing the likelihood of a disease or disorder, interrupt or slow the progression or reduce disability” [1]. In conjunction with this shift is an emphasis on health system changes that align with value-based healthcare. While there is no universal definition of what constitutes “value”, fundamentally the approach attempts to deliver financially sustainable healthcare, as opposed to cost reduction, while keeping the needs, experiences, and outcomes that matter to the patient at the core [2].
Integration and adoption of preventive health into existing health systems require leadership and support for significant health service reorientation. Indeed, the World Health Organization (WHO) recognises that of the five actions identified in the Ottawa Charter, reorientation of health services has been the most challenging [3]. Several recommendations have been made on how nations can develop strategies that positively influence the reorientation of health services, emphasising that development and design be contextual; achievable within the current health system, resource, and economic capabilities; and aligned with local values and preferences [3].
Like many other high-income countries, Australia’s current health systems focus heavily on treatment of illness and disease, with issues of access to healthcare and health inequity. The National Preventive Health Strategy 2021–2030 aims to rebalance the health system through a long term, systems-based approach [4]. This strategy acknowledges that the burden of ill health is not shared equally among the Australian community, and any service reorientation planning must include concerted efforts to reduce disparities and improve health outcomes among priority populations. In Australia, these groups include, but are not limited to, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD), lesbian, gay, transgender, queer or questioning, intersex, and/or sexuality and gender diverse people (LGBTQI+), people with mental illness, people of low socioeconomic status, people with disability, and rural, regional, and remote communities.
One of the policy goals identified within the National Preventive Health Strategy is the establishment of local prevention frameworks [4]. Ideally, these frameworks are evidence based, incorporating the elements of value. Economic evaluations can assist local public health services identify strategies and interventions within their local framework that demonstrate cost-effectiveness, representing value for money. Such evaluations need to consider local contextual factors, such as resource allocation, and what is within jurisdictional purchasing power [5].
Both the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare and the Productivity Commission have highlighted the need to ensure sustainability of Australia’s health expenditure by addressing the growing disparity in investment in preventive health compared to clinical services, specifically noting that despite the potential for significant returns from investments into preventive health, the field suffers from a relative lack of funding [6,7]. This review specifically seeks to identify where there is evidence of cost-effectiveness or returns on investment in preventive health.
A scoping review is a type of evidence synthesis that can be used to systematically map the scope, characteristics, and findings in an area, which is useful for identifying priority areas for future research, policy, and practice. Therefore, this type of research design is highly appropriate for summarising the evidence base to support the development of local prevention frameworks. To our knowledge, no scoping reviews have been conducted that have identified and mapped the evidence for preventive health strategies for multiple health risk factors and/or health conditions for predominately high-income countries. This review is important to provide a synthesis of relevant findings and draw conclusions based on the strength of the evidence to support translation. The aim of this scoping review was to identify and synthesise the available evidence from systematic reviews on the cost-effectiveness of preventive health strategies with relevance to local public health services, to inform the reorientation of preventive health services and delivery of value-based healthcare.

2. Materials and Methods

This scoping review was conducted in accordance with JBI methodology for scoping reviews [8] and reported using the PRISMA-ScR Reporting Standards (Table A1) [9] (Appendix A, Table 1). The protocol for the scoping review is provided in Appendix A, Table A2. Due to the exploratory nature of scoping reviews and the breadth of preventive health, a review of reviews approach was used [10], searching for publications that include high-level aggregate data and/or an evidence synthesis of primary trials. The purpose was to extract evidence that has already been synthesised and identify cost-effective focus areas for intervention in preventive health.

2.1. Definition of Key Terms

2.1.1. Types of Preventive Health

Types of preventive health were based on the National Preventive Health Strategy definitions, which represents a continuum spanning from wellness to ill health [4]. Primordial prevention, as defined by the strategy, is focused on the wider determinants of health by addressing the social and environmental factors across the entire population through strategies such as taxation, regulation, and infrastructure [4]. Primordial strategies require multilevel, multisectoral collaboration and investment and therefore fall outside the remit of local public health services. Primary prevention is focused on reducing risk factors to prevent ill health before it occurs through population-level strategies such as vaccination and targeted strategies for high-risk individuals, such as people with high blood pressure, low physical activity, poor dietary intake, or overweight/obesity [4]. Secondary prevention is focused on identifying individuals at high risk of ill health as well as early detection and management of a disease or disorder to either prevent or slow the long-term effects, using strategies such as health screening and counselling and education programmes [4]. Both primary and secondary health promotion are within the remit and purchasing power and embedded in service-level agreements of local public health services. Tertiary prevention focuses on managing established disease or disorder to maximise functional ability [4]. Quaternary prevention focuses on reducing harm from medical interventions used to manage a disease or disorder [4].
Health promotion is the process of “empowering people to increase control over their health and its determinants through health literacy efforts and multisectoral action to increase healthy behaviors” [11]. Disease prevention and health promotion share considerable overlap in goals and functions. The WHO characterise disease prevention services as those primarily concentrated within the healthcare sector, whereas health promotion services depend on intersectoral actions and/or are concerned with the social determinants of health.

2.1.2. Economic Evaluation and Evaluation Methods

For this scoping review, economic evaluation was defined as the “comparative analysis of alternative courses of action in terms of both their costs and consequences” [12]. There are several economic evaluation methods that can be used to evaluate cost-effectiveness. While measurement of cost is common to all methods, measurement and valuation of outcomes vary.
Cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) measures outcomes in natural health units such as deaths prevented, units of blood pressure, or minutes of physical activity. Cost–utility analysis (CUA) measures outcomes in quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), disability-adjusted life years (DALYs), or health-adjusted life years (HALYs), combining survival with quality of life, measured using preference-based, multiattribute utility instruments [13]. Both CEA and CUA compare alternatives using a summary measure, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER). ICERs can be compared against a pre-determined cost-effectiveness threshold, recognised as a willingness to pay for a QALY [14]. While thresholds vary between countries and debate surrounds their origins and limitations [15], ICERs provide decision makers with a benchmark to guide value-based decisions and some level of comparability when allocating scarce resources. The United Kingdom has published their willingness to pay threshold for a QALY as from GBP 20,000–30,000 [16]. However, empirical evidence suggests in practice the true threshold sits at GBP 13,000 [17]. In the United States, ICER thresholds range from USD 50,000 to USD 200,000 [18]. The WHO have a published threshold, generally for low- and middle-income countries, set at one to three times the per capita gross domestic product [19]. While Australia has no explicitly stated or public threshold, empirical studies have reported thresholds around AUD 28,000 based on decision-making patterns for pharmaceutical reimbursement [20].
Cost–benefit analysis (CBA) values outcomes in monetary terms with an action deemed cost-effective if the benefit to cost ratio is greater than 1. Cost–consequence analysis (CCA), a form of CBA, includes monetised outcomes where available alongside non-monetised outcomes reported in natural units, allowing decision makers to assess value, albeit subjectively. Cost-minimisation analysis (CMA) is a method commonly associated with non-inferiority trials. Where outcomes are shown to be statistically equivalent between comparators, the analysis is constrained to looking at differences in cost only and the alternative with the lowest cost is favourable. Return on investment (ROI), while not strictly a comparative analytical approach, is the monetary benefit minus cost expressed as a proportion of the cost [21]. For example, a programme that spends AUD 1 and saves AUD 9 in future spending has an ROI of 800%. Social return on investment (SROI) and social cost–benefit analysis (SCBA) are emerging approaches, which attempt to monetise outcomes not typically captured, such as wider social and environmental outcomes [22].

2.2. Search Strategy

The search strategy was developed and tested in consultation with a research librarian (JB) following the mixed method Population, Concept, Context (PCC) framework [23]. The search strategy included grey literature to find reviews of economic evaluations, relevant to local public health services, contained within reports and government documents, and not typically located in peer-reviewed publications.
An initial search strategy was piloted in MEDLINE with iterative screening of the first 100 titles and abstracts until the search terms were set (Table 1). The final search was performed in the following databases: MEDLINE, Embase, APO, and MedNar, for review articles published between 2005 and February 2022. The search of the academic literature was limited to 2 databases for pragmatic reasons. The year 2005 was chosen as data from PubMed indicated that 79% of articles related to preventive health interventions and economic evaluation were published after this date (Table A3). Furthermore, health economic evaluations were not vigorously reported until the introduction of the International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research Task Force guidance for economic evaluation alongside clinical trials which occurred in 2005 [24]. Australian health economic and tertiary institution websites were manually searched for the same period, using search filters/terms defined by the institutions’ own search engines. The full search strategy is available in Appendix A (Table A4 and Table A5). Citations identified by the search were collated and uploaded into EndNote X9 [25] and duplicates removed.

2.3. Selection of Articles

Articles were included if they described a review of economic evaluations for primary- and/or secondary-level prevention interventions within or relevant to a local public health service setting. Health promotion was included only when the intervention fell within the resourcing of local public health services. Economic evaluations were restricted to full evaluations, excluding partial economic evaluations (e.g., micro-costings), methodological reviews, or economic frameworks. Reviews were excluded if the authors identified the preventive health strategies as primordial, tertiary, or quaternary. Even though local public health services engage in tertiary preventive health strategies, the scope of this review was focused on primary and secondary prevention, with a view to reorienting health services from illness to wellness.
Clinical treatments, such as medical devices and pharmacotherapy for established disease, were excluded, except for therapies specifically for reducing tobacco use and nicotine addiction. In the absence of a stated level of prevention classification, the National Preventive Health Strategy was used as a reference point [4].
To increase generalisability to the Australian context, reviews of studies predominantly conducted in high-income countries, as defined by the World Bank for 2022 fiscal year [26], were included. Where reviews included studies in both high- and middle-income countries, a cut-off of ≤25% of all studies being from middle-income countries was applied. Reviews of low-income countries, global data, or aggregates of large regions (such as the European Union) were excluded. Non-English publications were also excluded due to resource constraints. Table 2 outlines the full inclusion and exclusion criteria applied for the screening of articles.

2.4. Evidence Screening and Selection

Pilot screening was conducted on titles and abstracts by two independent reviewers (DS, AH) for assessment against the initial eligibility criteria, with discrepancies resolved and revisions made to clarify eligibility criteria (Table 2). The remainder of the screening and selection process was undertaken primarily by one reviewer (DS), with 20% screened in duplicate by a second reviewer (AH); agreement was high at >95%.

2.5. Data Extraction and Synthesis

Data extraction was completed by two reviewers (DS, RT) with 20% screened by a third reviewer (AH). Data extraction was conducted within Microsoft Excel software (v16). Characteristics of the studies in each review were extracted, including the number of countries represented, date range of publication, review aim, population included, median sample size, and type of prevention intervention. Extracted data were then descriptively or quantitatively summarised (i.e., median, minimum, maximum). Detailed mapping of the priority populations, as defined by the National Preventive Health Strategy [4], included in each of the reviews was undertaken.
The economic evaluation characteristics and results of each review were extracted, including the number of economic evaluations, method of analysis, study design, valuation of outcomes, and key economic findings. There is debate in the literature regarding the value of meta-analysis for economic evaluations that are heterogeneous [27,28]; therefore, a narrative approach was taken to summarise the study findings. Intuitive conclusions were drawn from the economic evidence within each focus area, classified into the following categories: cost-effective, not cost-effective, lack of evidence, and unclear, based on the criteria reported in Table 3. Where there were multiple reviews concluding cost-effectiveness within the same focus area (e.g., type 2 diabetes), the individual studies were compared across reviews to identify overlap and avoid misrepresenting the strength of evidence.

2.6. Risk of Methodological Bias Appraisal of the Body of Evidence

In accordance with scoping review methods, appraisal of the risk of economic methodological bias in the included reviews was not conducted [9]. However, methodological appraisals conducted within the reviews, including assessment tools used, were extracted as part of the study characteristics.

3. Results

A total of 472 records were identified during the initial search with 192 duplications, returning 317 unique articles for screening. At title and abstract screening, 198 records were excluded, and 1 article not able to be retrieved. One hundred and eighteen full text articles were assessed for eligibility. A total of 26 systematic reviews were included in full data extraction. The results of each stage are illustrated in Figure 1.

3.1. Characteristics of Included Reviews

The characteristics of the 26 included systematic reviews are described in Table 4. The systematic reviews were predominately (19 of 26) published between 2015 and 2021. Across the systematic reviews, there were 674 economic evaluation studies, conducted in high-income (n = 22 countries) and middle-income (n = 10) countries (Figure A1). All systematic reviews (26 of 26) had ≥90% of included studies from high-income countries. Many of the reviews (n = 18) included studies conducted in Australia. Vos et al. [29] exclusively included 150 preventive health interventions that were modelled with the Australian population in 2003 as well as 21 interventions for the Australian indigenous population. The authors of these reviews did not report there was a significant difference in the findings of Australian studies versus other high-income countries. The sample population of the studies in the systematic reviews included universal (n = 7), adults (n = 13), adults and adolescents (n = 3), and children (n = 3). The systematic reviews that included priority populations are summarised in Table 5. The highest proportion of systematic reviews in priority populations included people with disabilities (11 of 26 reviews) and mental illness (10 of 26). Very few systematic reviews included Indigenous people (1 of 26) and LGBTQI+ (1 of 26). Only half (13 of 26) reported the sample sizes of the included studies; for these the median sample was 911 individuals (minimum = 196, maximum = 1,216,000).
Most systematic reviews (22 of 26) aimed to identify studies related to specific interventions (e.g., psychological) for a risk factor or condition (e.g., psychotic experiences). The remaining four aimed to identify economic evaluations in public health, without limiting to any particular focus area. Within reviews, studies were often grouped by characteristics such as population, intervention sub-types, intervention approach (i.e., universal vs. targeted), method of economic evaluation, methodological quality, and type of economic outcomes reported. More than half of the reviews (16 of 26) included interventions that targeted primary prevention. Prevention focus areas included mental health (n = 3 reviews), obesity (n = 1), type 2 diabetes (n = 3), dental caries (n = 2), public health (n = 4), chronic disease (n = 5), sexual health (n = 1), immunisation (n = 1), smoking cessation (n = 3), reducing alcohol (n = 1), and fractures (n = 2).

3.2. Economic Evaluation Methods

The economic evaluation methods and key findings are described in Table 6. The median number of economic evaluation studies included in the systematic reviews was 16 (minimum = 1, maximum = 150). Economic analysis methods included CEA, CUA, CBA, CCA, SROI, and ROI.

3.3. Risk of Methodological Bias of the Evidence from the Systematic Reviews

Twenty of twenty-six systematic reviews used an assessment tool to appraise the risk of economic methodological bias (Table 6). The quality assessment tools used included: the Drummond Critical Appraisal of Economic Evaluations Checklist (n = 6) [52], guidelines for authors and peer reviewers of economic submissions to the British Medical Journal (n = 4) [52], Krlev et al.’s framework (n = 2) [53], Consolidated Health Economic Evaluation Reporting Standards (CHEERS) Checklist (n = 2) [54], Assessing Cost Effectiveness (ACE) Study Priority-Setting Checklist (n = 1) [29], Community Guide protocol for economic evaluations (n = 1) [55], Consensus on Health Economics Criteria list (n = 1) [56], Quality Assessment Tool for Quantitative Studies (n = 1) [57], Quality of Health Economic Studies Instrument (n = 1) [58], National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) quality appraisal checklist for economic evaluations (n = 1) [59], and Philips’s Checklist (n = 1) [60]. Eleven systematic reviews [18,21,22,30,33,35,38,40,42,43,48] concluded that at least 70% of studies were highly rated for their methodological quality (Table 7). Limitations of the evidence commonly related to the use of a short time horizon, limited perspective for the economic analysis, and a higher proportion of studies from the United States.

3.4. Cost-Effective or Not Cost-Effective?

The categorisation of the cost-effectiveness of the interventions by health area for the included systematic reviews is reported in Table 7 and summarised below. Details about the type of interventions included in the reviews are provided in Appendix A Table A6.

3.4.1. Mental Health

Three systematic reviews [18,30,31] evaluated the economic evidence of mental health interventions. Le at al. [30] reviewed primary intervention studies (n = 65) for mental health disorders and mental health promotion across all life stages. The main types of interventions included were cognitive behavioural therapy, standard psychological intervention, school-based interventions, parenting interventions, and screening plus psychological interventions. Li et al. [34] classified 64% of the interventions as “unclear” since the health benefits associated with the intervention were at a higher cost. Thirty four percent of the interventions were classified as “favoured” which focused on children, adolescents, or adults and targeted the prevention of depression and suicide or promotion of mental health. The cost-effectiveness of these interventions was classified as not clear due to the broad scope of the systematic review which considered interventions that targeted multiple mental health conditions across different life stages.
Park et al. [31] reviewed secondary intervention studies (n = 11) for physical health promotion in adults and older adults with mental health disorders. There was a wide range of interventions that were included, such as cognitive behavioural therapy, physical exercise, and smoking cessation programmes. The cost-effectiveness of these interventions was classified as not clear. While there were 11 studies in the review the studies were too heterogeneous to draw conclusions on cost-effectiveness.
Soneson et al. [18] reviewed secondary prevention interventions (n = 2) for psychotic experiences in adolescents and adults. There was insufficient evidence to determine the cost-effectiveness of cognitive behavioural therapy interventions; the two articles identified were based on data from a single RCT.

3.4.2. Obesity

One systematic review [32] evaluated the long-term (≥40 years) impact of primary prevention intervention studies (n = 16) for obesity for all life stages. The main types of interventions included diet, physical activity, and lifestyle. Lehnert et al. [32] reported that 81% of behavioural and 75% of community interventions were cost-effective or cost-saving. In particular, this systematic review found that seven of nine lifestyle interventions were cost-effective [32]. These interventions were predominately (83%) in adults and the economic evidence for interventions that targeted children was not favourable. Interventions targeting adults were therefore classified as cost-effective, while interventions in children were classified as lacking evidence as only three studies were included. Nine of sixteen studies included in the review were based on economic evidence from the Australian ACE study on prevention of obesity, which overlapped with studies included in the systematic review by Vos et al. [29] included in this scoping review; however, this did not change the interpretation of obesity prevention being cost-effective.

3.4.3. Type 2 Diabetes

Three systematic reviews [33,34,35] evaluated the economic evidence of type 2 diabetes interventions for adults. Interventions were classified as cost-effective across all three systematic reviews. Glechner et al. [33] reported that 94% of studies (n = 14) found that diet and physical activity intervention studies were cost-effective. Li et al. [34] reported that 85% of diet and physical activity intervention studies (n = 22) were cost-effective. Group-based programmes were found to be more cost-effective compared with individual-based programmes [33]. Zhou et al. [35] reported that lifestyle interventions targeting diet and physical activity were the most cost-effective interventions, followed by metformin interventions. The median ICERs for group-based interventions were less than half of those for individual-based interventions [35]. In total there were 64 studies included across the 3 systematic reviews; 18 studies (28%) overlapped between reviews. There were sixteen studies that overlapped between two reviews, and two studies between three systematic reviews; this did not change the interpretation of type 2 diabetes prevention being cost-effective.

3.4.4. Dental Caries

Two systematic reviews [36,37] evaluated the economic evidence of dental caries interventions in children. Anopa [36] reviewed primary prevention intervention studies (n = 16) for dental caries in pre-school-aged children. The main types of interventions included were multicomponent interventions, fluoride treatment, molar sealant, and oral hygiene and diet education. The cost-effectiveness of these interventions was classified as unclear since only 40% and 50% of studies that conducted CEA and CBA, respectively, reported the interventions to be cost-effective. Fraihat et al. [37] also reviewed prevention studies (n = 19) but for both pre-school-aged and primary-aged children. A wide variety of interventions were included and sub-group analyses indicated that primary prevention interventions were only effective in reducing incremental cost for children older than six years (n = 4) and were not cost-effective for children less than six years old (n = 14). These interventions were classified as not clear due to the mixed findings.

3.4.5. Public Health

Four systematic reviews [21,22,38,39] evaluated the economic evidence of public health interventions. A wide variety of interventions were included such as physical activity, substance misuse, child behavioural management, community-based programmes, and healthy lifestyle interventions. These reviews were broad in scope and included interventions that targeted multiple health conditions across different life stages. As the studies included were too heterogeneous to draw conclusions, cost-effectiveness was classified as unclear for the four systematic reviews.

3.4.6. Chronic Disease

Five systematic reviews [29,40,41,42,43] evaluated the economic evidence for chronic disease prevention. Three systematic reviews [29,40,41], including one review in which the interventions were modelled exclusively on the Australian population, were broad in scope and included interventions that targeted multiple health conditions across different life stages. Therefore, the cost-effectiveness of interventions was assessed as unclear for these three systematic reviews. Mattli et al. [42] reviewed physical activity intervention studies (n = 12) for chronic disease in adults. These interventions were classified as not cost-effective since 82% of the studies reported an ICER above the cut-off defined by Mattli et al. [42]. The systematic review of lifestyle interventions for chronic disease prevention in adults by Pennington et al. [43] only included three studies; therefore, it was classified as lacking evidence.

3.4.7. Sexual Health

One systematic review [44] evaluated primary and secondary intervention studies (n = 31) for sexually transmitted infections and human immunodeficiency virus. The majority (25 of 31 studies) of the included studies assessed the cost-effectiveness of different screening approaches for chlamydia trachomatis. The cost-effectiveness of these interventions was classified as unclear, because findings were mixed with 52% of the studies indicating that chlamydia trachomatis screening is cost-effective for adults less than 30 years of age.

3.4.8. Immunisation

One systematic review [45] evaluated economic evidence of influenza vaccination studies (n = 8) for children. Influenza vaccines were classified as cost-effective since all included studies in the systematic review concluded that vaccinations, specifically the quadrivalent formulation, were cost-effective. Six of eight studies were funded by pharmaceutical companies or employees were co-authors of articles.

3.4.9. Smoking Cessation

Three systematic reviews [46,47,48] evaluated the economic evidence of smoking cessation interventions for adults. Cheung et al. [46] reviewed online smoking cessation interventions in the Netherlands. There was a lack of evidence to draw conclusions about the cost-effectiveness of these interventions, as only two eligible studies were identified.
The two other reviews on smoking cessation were classified as cost-effective. Lee et al. [47] reviewed adult inpatient smoking cessation interventions (n = 9) and found they were highly cost-effective and the degree of cost-effectiveness might not be related to the components of the programme or methodological variations in the cost-effectiveness analysis. Mahmoudi et al. [48] reviewed non-nicotine therapies for smoking cessation (n = 10) and found varcenicline (a drug that blocks nicotine from triggering the release of dopamine) was clinically superior and cost-saving compared to bupropion (a drug used to balance dopamine levels when nicotine is excreted from the body) in most cost-effectiveness models. Variations in time horizon, cost of bupropion, efficacy of either drug, age, and the incidence of smoking-related disease were noted as factors that could change the interpretation of results.

3.4.10. Reducing Alcohol

One systematic review [49] evaluated the economic evidence of telehealth medicine for alcohol abuse, addiction, and rehabilitation. There was a lack of evidence to draw conclusions about the cost-effectiveness as only one study was included in the review.

3.4.11. Fractures

Two systematic reviews [50,51] evaluated the economic evidence for a fracture liaison service programme and it was categorised as cost-effective. Ganda et al. [50] reported that four of four studies on identification, assessment, and treatment of patients as part of the service showed it was cost-saving or cost-effective. One study on identification, assessment, and then referral for treatment by a primary care physician also showed it was cost-effective. Wu et al. [51] reported that the fracture liaison service was cost-effective regardless of the intensity of the service delivery or the country of the implemented service. In total there were twenty-four studies included across the two systematic reviews; one study (4%) was identified in both systematic reviews; however, this did not change the interpretation of fracture prevention being cost-effective.

4. Discussion

This review used a systematic approach to map the best of the available evidence regarding the cost-effectiveness of preventive health strategies. The accessibility of economic evidence nationally and internationally and the health economics knowledge and skills of health decision makers are significant barriers for the use of economic evidence in decision making [61,62]. Therefore, the scope, characteristics, and findings of research in this area were synthesised and summarised to provide visibility to existing evidence for local public health services. This can be used in priority setting and to inform the development of local prevention frameworks that support the reorientation and delivery of value-based healthcare.
Our evidence synthesis of 26 systematic reviews found obesity (in adults), type 2 diabetes, smoking cessation, immunisation, and fracture prevention were cost-effective preventive health areas, based on existing evidence. For more than half (65%) of the reviews there was either not enough evidence to draw conclusions or the findings were unclear. This review provides clear guidance for where further economic evaluations are needed within preventive health.
In Australia, the National Preventive Health Strategy 2021–2030 identified seven focus areas for the prevention of chronic disease which include nutrition, physical activity, tobacco, immunisation, cancer screening, alcohol and other drug use, and mental health [4]. These focus areas were given priority to boost prevention in the first years of the strategy as cancer, mental health, and substance abuse disorders were the leading national burden of disease groups in 2015 [63]. Tobacco use, overweight and obesity, and dietary risks are the main modifiable factors contributing to the national disease burden [63]. Cadilhac et al. [64] reported that by targeting five risk factors (poor diet, physical activity, tobacco use, excessive alcohol consumption, and overweight and obesity), cost savings of AUD 2334 million over the lifetime of the Australian adult population could be achieved. While the strategy aims to promote health benefits particularly in communities with health inequalities and generate health gains across all life stages through impactful and coordinated initiatives within these focus areas [4], local public health services are required to implement state-level frameworks that are not well aligned with the strategy.
The economic methodology of the studies included in the systematic review varied widely based on modelling approach (e.g., trial-based analysis, modelled dichotomy economic evaluations), time frame, perspective of analysis, and study context. This heterogeneity was acknowledged within various systematic reviews [35,40,47] and precluded meta-analysis, therefore a narrative approach was taken. There are pros and cons for each of the modelling approaches. An advantage of “trial-based analysis” is that the relative treatment effect is based on a study design that minimises the risk of selection bias through use of randomisation. However, it is argued that “trial-based analysis” represents only a partial form of analysis because the study design only compares a limited number of interventions, the length of follow-up is shorter than what is required for economic analysis, it may not be relevant to the decision context, it does not incorporate all evidence that is available, and the decision uncertainty can only be quantified based on evidence from the trial (a single input) [65]. “Modelled” dichotomy economic evaluations have the advantage of being able to fully characterise decision uncertainty by combining data from multiple inputs including clinical efficiency data from trials. Two systematic reviews [22,38] evaluated studies that used SROI and SCBA which are recently adopted approaches for conducting economic evaluations. These systematic reviews identified that SROI and SCBA studies have predominately been implemented in the United Kingdom and published in the grey literature [22,38]. The methodological weaknesses (e.g., use of estimated or subjective parameters, assumptions are required) associated with these approaches have been acknowledged as a contributing factor for the lack of published studies in the peer-reviewed literature.
This scoping review has several strengths. Firstly, health service stakeholders co-created the design, conduct, analysis, interpretation, and drafting of the manuscript. The scoping review was conducted and reported in accordance with the PRISMA-ScR Reporting Standards. The review synthesised the highest level of evidence (systematic review) and included preventive health strategies that targeted any type of health problem across different life stages. The review also has some limitations that should be considered. The search of the academic literature was limited to two databases: MEDLINE and Embase. The search terms were not exhaustive and included studies were limited to those published in English between 2005 and 2022. Reviews were only included if primary and secondary preventive health strategies were relevant to local public health services and studies were predominately conducted in high-income countries. Studies were conducted in a wide variety of healthcare settings which may limit the generalisability of the findings to other local public health services. However, reviews in the type 2 diabetes focus area included the prescription of metformin as the study intervention which is a treatment rather prevention and is outside the scope of local public health services. These reviews were included to avoid excluding diabetes prevention programme interventions as the study intervention or comparator which is relevant to local public health services.
Preventive health interventions, such as sustained behaviour change compared with clinical interventions, require a long-term follow-up period or modelled dichotomy economic evaluations to observe the anticipated health gains. Many of the trial-based analyses were reliant on interventions with a short-term follow-up period and, therefore, the economic benefits were limited to intermediate indicators. The perspective of the analysis varied considerably by the studies included in the systematic reviews. This may reflect the lack of consensus on the recommendations from the study perspective provided by national healthcare economic evaluation guidelines [65,66]. Weise et al. [67] recently reviewed the assessment approaches for transferability and recommended that the assessment methods chosen should be relevant to the health area and the context of the decision making.

4.1. Implications

In this review, the following preventive interventions were concluded to be cost effective: adult obesity (behavioural and community interventions), type 2 diabetes (lifestyle interventions), smoking cessation (adult inpatient programme and non-nicotine therapies), immunisation, and fracture prevention (fracture liaison service programme). However, to enable the use of economic evidence to inform public policy agendas and political prioritisation, local public health services may still want to consider if systematic review evidence is transferable to their local context prior to setting policies and implementing the evidence. One study by Nystrand et al. [64] examined delivery differences, feasibility of implementation, costings, and intervention outcomes when assessing the potential transferability of systematic review evidence of the cost-effectiveness of public health interventions targeting the use of alcohol, illicit drugs, and tobacco, as well as problematic gambling behaviour. While this approach may have utility, it is resource intensive. In comparison, Welte et al. [68] and Goeree et al. [69] developed user-friendly decision charts and a classification system that indicates transferability factors and approaches for improving transferability to support decision-making processes.

4.2. Future Research Directions

For many (65%) of the systematic reviews, the authors of the current scoping review concluded there was not enough evidence or the evidence was unclear regarding the cost-effectiveness of the interventions. This highlights the need for further research so more definitive conclusions can be drawn regarding the economic evidence for preventive health interventions. Greater consideration is also needed for priority populations in future research, especially for Indigenous people and LGBTQI+. Wider determinants of health such as social, environmental, structural, economic, cultural, biomedical, commercial, and digital factors prevent these priority populations from having fair and just opportunities to attain the highest level of health and lead to inequity [4]. The United National 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development strives to “leave no one behind”; this commitment is reflected in 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) [70]. A call to achieve health equity is implied in SDG3 “ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages” [70]. The National Health Strategy also aims to address health equity in priority populations [4]. Therefore, ensuring that equity is considered in future research is important as this is a high priority for local public health services for informing policy. However, cost-effectiveness analysis was primarily designed to optimise efficiency in the allocation of healthcare resources without considering health equity [71]. This prevents local public health services from understanding if there are any trade-offs between efficiency and equity. Alternative methods to the traditional cost-effectiveness analysis have been developed, such as equity-informative cost-effectiveness analysis and distributional cost-effectiveness analysis, which is an important step for the consideration of health equity in future economic evaluations [72,73,74,75].
Conducting prospective economic evaluations in which costs are recorded for the intervention design and local adaptation, implementation, and scale-up will be essential. Sohn et al. [76] has provided a conceptual framework consisting of three phases: design, initiation, and maintenance, to assist researchers in assessing implementation costs. Jalai et al. [77] recently reviewed statistical approaches for addressing missing data when conducting prospective economic evaluations alongside clinical trials. This evidence will assist local public health services in understanding the application of potential interventions for use in different contexts.

5. Conclusions

This scoping review identified a large amount of evidence from systematic reviews on the cost-effectiveness of preventive health strategies, however, for most reviews there was a lack of evidence or the evidence was unclear. Interventions targeting obesity, type 2 diabetes, smoking cessation, and fractures were found to be cost-effective. We found limited evidence related to equity in priority populations. Local contextual factors need consideration in the translation of these findings into practice, including local public health services.

Author Contributions

Conceptualisation, P.R., N.K., A.S., A.B. and A.H.; methodology, D.S., R.T. and A.H.; writing—original draft preparation, R.T., D.S. and A.H.; writing—review and editing, R.T., D.S., P.R., N.K., A.S., E.S., A.B., C.W. and A.H.; supervision, P.R. and A.H. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

Data are contained within the article.

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank and acknowledge the support from Research Librarian Jessica Birchall (JB), University of Newcastle, who assisted with developing the search strategy. We thank Anthea Bill for expertise and assistance in reviewing the content of the drafted manuscript.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A

Table A1. Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses Extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR) checklist.
Table A1. Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses Extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR) checklist.
SectionItemPRISMA-ScR Checklist ItemReported on Page
Title
Title1Identify the report as a scoping review.Page 1,
Lines 2–3
Abstract
Structured summary2Provide a structured summary that includes (as applicable): background, objectives, eligibility criteria, sources of evidence, charting methods, results, and conclusions that relate to the review questions and objectives.Page 1,
Lines 16–29
Introduction
Rationale3Describe the rationale for the review in the context of what is already known. Explain why the review questions/objectives lend themselves to a scoping review approach.Pages 1–2
Lines 34–84
Objectives4Provide an explicit statement of the questions and objectives being addressed with reference to their key elements (e.g., population or participants, concepts, and context) or other relevant key elements used to conceptualize the review questions and/or objectives.Page 2
Lines 84–88
Methods
Protocol and registration5Indicate whether a review protocol exists; state if and where it can be accessed (e.g., a Web address); and if available, provide registration information, including the registration number.Page 2,
Line 92
Eligibility criteria6Specify characteristics of the sources of evidence used as eligibility criteria (e.g., years considered, language, and publication status), and provide a rationale.Pages 4–5
Lines 189–210
Information sources *7Describe all information sources in the search (e.g., databases with dates of coverage and contact with authors to identify additional sources), as well as the date the most recent search was executed.Page 4
Lines 165–185
Search8Present the full electronic search strategy for at least 1 database, including any limits used, such that it could be repeated.Page 4,
Lines 183–184
Selection of sources of evidence 9State the process for selecting sources of evidence (i.e., screening and eligibility) included in the scoping review.Page 5,
Line 212–216
Data charting process 10Describe the methods of charting data from the included sources of evidence (e.g., calibrated forms or forms that have been tested by the team before their use, and whether data charting was done independently or in duplicate) and any processes for obtaining and confirming data from investigators.Page 5, Lines 218–236
Data items11List and define all variables for which data were sought and any assumptions and simplifications made.Page 5, Lines 218–236
Critical appraisal of individual sources of evidence §12If done, provide a rationale for conducting a critical appraisal of included sources of evidence; describe the methods used and how this information was used in any data synthesis (if appropriate).Page 5, Lines 238–241
Synthesis of results13Describe the methods of handling and summarizing the data that were charted.Page 5, Lines 218–236
Results
Selection of sources of evidence14Give numbers of sources of evidence screened, assessed for eligibility, and included in the review, with reasons for exclusions at each stage, ideally using a flow diagram.Page 7, Figure 1
Characteristics of sources of evidence15For each source of evidence, present characteristics for which data were charted and provide the citations.Pages 8–11
Table 4
Critical appraisal within sources of evidence16If done, present data on critical appraisal of included sources of evidence (see item 12).Pages 21–22, Table 7
Results of individual sources of evidence17For each included source of evidence, present the relevant data that were charted that relate to the review questions and objectives.Pages 16–20,
Table 6
Synthesis of results18Summarize and/or present the charting results as they relate to the review questions and objectives.Pages 21–22, Table 7
Discussion
Summary of evidence19Summarize the main results (including an overview of concepts, themes, and types of evidence available), link to the review questions and objectives, and consider the relevance to key groups.Page 22–23
Lines 478–529
Limitations20Discuss the limitations of the scoping review process.Page 23
Lines 536–547
Conclusions21Provide a general interpretation of the results with respect to the review questions and objectives, as well as potential implications and/or next steps.Page 24,
Lines 560–605
Funding
Funding22Describe sources of funding for the included sources of evidence, as well as sources of funding for the scoping review. Describe the role of the funders of the scoping review.Page 25,
Line 622
JBI = Joanna Briggs Institute; PRISMA-ScR = Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses Extension for Scoping Reviews. * Where sources of evidence (see second footnote) are compiled from, such as bibliographic databases, social media platforms, and websites. A more inclusive/heterogeneous term used to account for the different types of evidence or data sources (e.g., quantitative and/or qualitative research, expert opinion, and policy documents) that may be eligible in a scoping review as opposed to only studies. This is not to be confused with information sources (see first footnote). The frameworks by Arksey and O’Malley (6) and Levac and colleagues (7) and the JBI guidance (4, 5) refer to the process of data extraction in a scoping review as data charting. § The process of systematically examining research evidence to assess its validity, results, and relevance before using it to inform a decision. This term is used for items 12 and 19 instead of “risk of bias” (which is more applicable to systematic reviews of interventions) to include and acknowledge the various sources of evidence that may be used in a scoping review (e.g., quantitative and/or qualitative research, expert opinion, and policy document).
Table A2. Scoping review protocol.
Table A2. Scoping review protocol.
Scoping Review Details
Scoping review titleHealth Economic Considerations in the Development of a Local Health District Preventive Care Framework
Review objectives
(a)
Identify cost-effective strategies that have been developed and trialled in other jurisdictions/districts on district level preventative health frameworks and
(b)
generate evidence for the valuation of downstream final outcomes that can be expressed as a result of the upfront investment in prevention
Review questions
  • What is known from the existing literature about cost-effective strategies that have been developed and trialled in health service jurisdictions in preventative health frameworks?
  • What is known from the existing evidence on the valuation of downstream final outcomes achieved after the initial investment in preventative health?
DatabasesMEDLINE, Embase, Scopus
Grey literatureAnalysis & Policy Observatory (APO), MedNar
Institutions and associations within the fields of
  • Health economics—Sax Institute, Centre for Economic Evaluation etc.
  • Tertiary institutions

Records limited to
  • Reports, health system publications
  • Policies and clinical practice frameworks/guidelines
  • Evidence briefs
Search periodPublished in the period 2005 to 2022
Inclusion/Exclusion CriteriaInclusionExclusion
Population, patient, or problemStudies that relate to the whole district population
Key terms include:
  • Population
  • Whole of population
* No age, gender, cultural, and geographical limitations apply
  • Small-scale study samples
  • Animal studies
  • Low- and middle-income countries
  • Individual disease or risk factor
InterventionStudies that relate district-level strategies and frameworks to implement preventive health
  • Framework
  • Policy
  • Improvement plan
  • Strategies/strategic plan
  • Model of care
  • Concept
  • Guidelines
  • Protocol
  • Intervention that is contrived/conceptual
  • Individual disease or risk factor
  • Tertiary prevention
Comparator
  • Status quo or current model (medical and/or preventive)
  • No comparator/usual care
Context/ContentStudies relating to preventive care frameworks from the public health service perspective
  • Public health service
  • Public health system
  • Local health district
* No age, gender, cultural, and geographical limitations apply
  • Private health setting
  • Solely private/corporate enterprise (i.e., private health funds, pharmaceutical, NGOs)
  • Individual hospital setting (i.e., ED, inpatient, outpatient)
  • Individual disease or risk factor
OutcomesStudies in which the cost-effectiveness of the intervention and/or downstream final outcomes are measured and valued
Economics
  • Economic analysis
  • Valuation
  • Value for money
  • Cost-effectiveness
  • Downstream outcomes
  • Organisational outcomes
  • Final outcomes
  • Sustainable
  • Scalability
  • Public health spending
  • Expenditure
  • Outcomes specific to only one disease or risk factor
  • Valuation of outcomes not quantified
  • Downstream/final outcomes not specified
  • Studies that mention cost-effective interventions but lack sufficient evidence to identify specific strategies and/or cost data
Types of studies
  • Human
  • Quantitative
  • Qualitative
  • International
  • Animal
Study design
  • Full economic evaluation
  • Studies of any design that reported public health interventions delivered in industrialised countries providing universal healthcare
  • Partial evaluation (cost analysis only)
  • Studies with poor generalisability to AUS were excluded, including a number from the USA that may poorly reflect AUS healthcare systems, structure, and demographics
Types of evidence sources
  • Published and unpublished primary studies
  • Systematic reviews
  • Meta-analysis
  • Policy documents/guidelines/standards/framework
  • Websites for grey literature sources
Evidence source details and characteristics
Citation detailsAuthor(s)
Publication year
Source origin/country of origin
Details/results extracted from source of evidence
Study characteristicsPublication type
No. of reviews or studies included
Population type
Preventive care strategy type
Cost-effective outcome
Valuation of final downstream outcomes
Screening the evidence
Number of reviewers2
Process for piloting screening, inclusion, and identification processA single reviewer (DS) will screen possible records based on title and abstract for inclusion and then in full-text article retrieval. Identification of records will be performed by DS and AJH
Management of disagreementsIf there are disagreements between the two reviewers and consensus cannot occur, a third reviewer (PR) will assess the source to determine its eligibility
Software used in selectionEndNote
* Adapted from JBI Manual for Evidence Synthesis, Chapter 6 Systematic reviews of economic evaluations and Chapter 11 (Scoping reviews).
Table A3. PubMed search of articles published between 1965 and 2022. Search query: preventive health intervention and economic evaluation.
Table A3. PubMed search of articles published between 1965 and 2022. Search query: preventive health intervention and economic evaluation.
Year of PublicationNumber of Articles Published
2022512
2021647
2020719
2019809
2018820
2017785
2016726
2015748
2014672
2013647
2012623
2011540
2010474
2009458
2008432
2007382
2006349
2005310
2004261
2003228
2002229
2001239
2000240
1999200
1998190
1997168
1996166
1995118
1994116
1993116
199292
199191
199063
198952
198839
198726
198628
198522
198426
198322
198214
198114
19808
19797
197815
19779
197612
19756
19741
19731
19721
19714
19651
Table A4. Peer-reviewed literature search strategy.
Table A4. Peer-reviewed literature search strategy.
Search SetMEDLINE Primary PreventionResultsMEDLINE
Secondary Prevention
ResultsEMBASE
Primary Prevention
ResultsEMBASE
Secondary Prevention
Results
1Public Health/ec3675Public Health/ec3677public health/216,169public health/89,658
2Health Promotion/ec2945Health Promotion/ec2946health promotion/104,403health promotion/78,797
3Primary Prevention/ec748Secondary Prevention/ec214primary prevention/43,974secondary prevention/22,101
4Efficiency, Organizational/ec [Economics]2007Efficiency, Organizational/ec [Economics]2007organizational efficiency/1185organizational efficiency/22,304
5conceptual framework.mp.14,252conceptual framework.mp.14,291conceptual framework.mp.41,767conceptual framework.mp.14,308
6health care service *.mp.17,729health care service *.mp.17,751health care service *.mp.21,337health care service *.mp.17,761
71 or 2 or 3 or 4 or 5 or 640,9681 or 2 or 3 or 4 or 5 or 640,5891 or 2 or 3 or 4 or 5 or 6411,8131 or 2 or 3 or 4 or 5 or 6237,994
8(prevent * or promot *).mp.3,672,540(prevent * or promot *).mp.3,677,713(prevent * or promot *).mp.4,543,210(prevent * or promot *).mp.3,679,847
9(health prevention or health promotion).mp.100,740(health prevention or health promotion).mp.100,830(health prevention or health promotion).mp.121,932(health prevention or health promotion).mp.100,857
108 or 93,672,5408 or 93,677,7138 or 94,543,2108 or 93,679,847
11Cost-Benefit Analysis/or Value for Money.mp. or Health Care Costs/122,325Cost-Benefit Analysis/or Value for Money.mp. or Health Care Costs/122,423Cost-Benefit Analysis/or Value for Money.mp. or Health Care Costs/250,377Cost-Benefit Analysis/or Value for Money.mp. or Health Care Costs/122,489
12Economic evaluation.mp.11,627Economic evaluation.mp.11,651Economic evaluation.mp.26,535Economic evaluation.mp.11,654
13((Cost Effective or Cost Utility or Cost Benefit or Cost Consequence or Cost minimis *) adj Analys?s).mp.92,632((Cost Effective or Cost Utility or Cost Benefit or Cost Consequence or Cost minimis *) adj Analys?s).mp.92,721((Cost Effective or Cost Utility or Cost Benefit or Cost Consequence or Cost minimis *) adj Analys?s).mp.103,559((Cost Effective or Cost Utility or Cost Benefit or Cost Consequence or Cost minimis *) adj Analys?s).mp.92,762
14(Return of Investment or return to investment or Social Return of Investment or social return to investment).mp.2199(Return of Investment or return to investment or Social Return of Investment or social return to investment).mp.2202(Return of Investment or return to investment or Social Return of Investment or social return to investment).mp.2903(Return of Investment or return to investment or Social Return of Investment or social return to investment).mp.2200
15(cost effective * or efficien * or cost saving * or cost analys?s or return on).mp.1,351,342(cost effective * or efficien * or cost saving * or cost analys?s or return on).mp.1,353,818(cost effective * or efficien * or cost saving * or cost analys?s or return on).mp.1,627,269(cost effective * or efficien * or cost saving * or cost analys?s or return on).mp.1,354,960
1611 or 12 or 13 or 14 or 151,417,12811 or 12 or 13 or 14 or 151,419,64411 or 12 or 13 or 14 or 151,819,36811 or 12 or 13 or 14 or 151,420,811
177 and 10 and 1630507 and 10 and 1627567 and 10 and 1617,7447 and 10 and 169822
18review.m_titl.585,846review.m_titl.587,375review.m_titl.697,162review.m_titl.588,146
1917 and 1816617 and 1815617 and 1879617 and 18498
20limit 19 to (english language and humans and yr = “2005–Current”)128limit 19 to (english language and humans and yr = “2005–Current”)122limit 19 to (human and english language and yr = “2005–Current”)679limit 19 to (human and english language and yr = “2005–Current”)414
21 limit 20 to COVID-1931limit 20 to COVID-197
22 20 not 2164820 not 21407
23 “cost effect *”.m_titl.45,637“cost effect *”.m_titl.31,253
24 22 and 236122 and 2347
* Search operator.
Table A5. Grey literature search strategy.
Table A5. Grey literature search strategy.
APOResults MedNarResults
Date accessed15 February 2022 Date accessed15 February 2022
SubjectEconomics Search termspopulation health framework economic evaluation
Search termsPreventive health1375ClusterMedical1400
SubjectPreventive health50TopicsCost-effective62
Date publishedAll
2012–2021
50AuthorsAll62
CollectionAll50PublicationsAll62
PublisherAll50SourceAll62
Author/creatorAll50DatesAll (2008 to 2022)59
Geographic coverageAll50Document FormatAll59
Resource typeAll50Document TypeAll59
Results 50Results 59
Table A6. Summary of cost-effective interventions for studies included in the review.
Table A6. Summary of cost-effective interventions for studies included in the review.
First Author, Year of ReviewTarget ProblemTarget PopulationType of InterventionTotal No. of Cost-Effective StudiesDesign of the Cost-Effective Studies
Mental health
Le, 2021 [30]AnxietyChildrenCBT2 of 21 RCT, 1 model study
Le, 2021 [30]AnxietyParents and childrenCBT1 of 11 model study
Le, 2021 [30]AnxietyParentsCBT2 of 21 RCT, 1 model study
Le, 2021 [30]DepressionChildrenSchool-based intervention1 of 21 model study
Le, 2021 [30]DepressionChildrenPsychological intervention1 of 11 model study
Le, 2021 [30]Behavioural problemsChildrenPsychological intervention1 of 1Pre–post study
Le, 2021 [30]Behavioural problemsParents and childrenScreening and parent psychoeducation0 of 1N/A
Le, 2021 [30]Behavioural problemsParentsParent psychoeducation1 of 11 model study
Le, 2021 [30]Suicide preventionChildrenCBT0 of 1N/A
Le, 2021 [30]Suicide preventionChildrenSchool-based intervention0 of 1N/A
Le, 2021 [30]Suicide preventionChildrenScreening0 of 1N/A
Le, 2021 [30]General mental healthDivorced familiesParenting programme or child and parenting programme1 of 11 RCT
Le, 2021 [30]MaltreatmentChildrenPsychological intervention1 of 11 RCT
Le, 2021 [30]DepressionAdolescentsCBT2 of 21 RCT, 1 model study
Le, 2021 [30]DepressionAdolescentsSchool-based CBT0 of 1N/A
Le, 2021 [30]DepressionAdolescentsPhysical activity intervention1 of 11 RCT
Le, 2021 [30]Eating disordersAdolescentsSchool-based intervention1 of 21 model study
Le, 2021 [30]Drug useAdolescentsEducation and training programmes1 of 11 model study
Le, 2021 [30]BullyingAdolescentsSchool programme1 of 11 model study
Le, 2021 [30]DepressionAdultsPsychological intervention4 of 41 RCT, 3 model studies
Le, 2021 [30]DepressionAdultsCBT3 of 31 RCT, 2 model studies
Le, 2021 [30]DepressionAdultsPsychological intervention3 of 41 RCT, 2 model studies
Le, 2021 [30]DepressionAdultsBrief bibliotherapy1 of 1N/A
Le, 2021 [30]DepressionAdultsWorkplace education1 of 11 pre–post-test study
Le, 2021 [30]DepressionAdultsPeer support intervention1 of 1N/A
Le, 2021 [30]DepressionAdultsTraining for visiting new mothers1 of 11 RCT
Le, 2021 [30]Suicide preventionAdultsPsychological intervention4 of 44 model studies
Le, 2021 [30]Suicide preventionAdultsCBT1 of 21 model study
Le, 2021 [30]Suicide preventionAdultsScreening and psychological intervention1 of 11 model study
Le, 2021 [30]Suicide preventionAdultsWorkplace education0 of 1N/A
Le, 2021 [30]General mental healthAdultsPsychological intervention4 of 52 RCTs, 1 non-RCT, 1 cross-sectional study
Le, 2021 [30]General mental healthAdultsScreening1 of 11 RCT
Le, 2021 [30]General mental healthAdultsPhysical activity intervention1 of 11 RCT
Le, 2021 [30]Eating disordersAdultsCognitive dissonance1 of 11 RCT
Le, 2021 [30]Eating disordersAdultsScreening and psychological intervention1 of 11 model study
Le, 2021 [30]Eating disordersAdultsPsychological intervention1 of 11 model study
Le, 2021 [30]Generalised anxiety disorderAdultsCBT2 of 22 model studies
Le, 2021 [30]PsychosisAdultsCBT2 of 21 RCT, 1 model study
Le, 2021 [30]Panic disorderAdultsCBT1 of 11 RCT
Le, 2021 [30]Substance abuseAdultsPeer-based prevention programme1 of 11 retrospective ecological study
Le, 2021 [30]DepressionOlder adultsPsychological intervention2 of 32 RCTs
Le, 2021 [30]DepressionOlder adultsCBT1 of 11 RCT
Park 2013 [31]Mental and substance
abuse disorders
AdultsIntegrated management programme0 of 3N/A
Park 2013 [31]Sedentary behaviourAdultsPrimary care physical activity intervention2 of 22 RCTs
Park 2013 [31]HIVAdultsSmall-group intervention1 of 21 model study
Park 2013 [31]Blood-borne infectious diseasesAdultsSpecialist brief programme0 of 2N/A
Park 2013 [31]Mental healthAdultsPhysical exercise programme1 of 11 RCT
Park 2013 [31]Smoking cessationAdultsSmoking cessation programme1 of 11 RCT
Soneson, 2020 [18]PsychosisAdolescents and adultsCBT1 of 21 RCT
Obesity
Lehnert 2012 [32]ObesityChildrenSchool curriculum programme0 of 1N/A
Lehnert 2012 [32]ObesityChildrenActive after school programme0 of 2N/A
Lehnert 2012 [32]ObesityChildrenFamily-based GP-mediated intervention0 of 1N/A
Lehnert 2012 [32]ObesityAdultsDiet intervention3 of 43 model studies
Lehnert 2012 [32]ObesityAdultsDiet and exercise intervention0 of 3N/A
Lehnert 2012 [32]ObesityAdultsDiet and pharmacotherapy intervention0 of 3N/A
Lehnert 2012 [32]ObesityAdultsDiet, exercise, and behaviour modification intervention6 of 76 model studies
Lehnert 2012 [32]ObesityAdultsCommunity programme2 of 23 model studies
Lehnert 2012 [32]ObesityAdultsPhysical activity1 of 11 model study
Type 2 diabetes
Glechner 2018 [33]Type 2 diabetesAdultsLifestyle intervention10 of 135 model studies,
Glechner 2018 [33]Type 2 diabetesAdultsPharmacotherapy8 of 104 model studies, 4 RCTs
Glechner 2018 [33]Type 2 diabetesAdultsScreening + lifestyle intervention1 of 11 model study
Glechner 2018 [33]Type 2 diabetesAdultsPharmacotherapy + lifestyle intervention1 of 11 RCT
Li 2015 [34]Type 2 diabetesAdultsLifestyle intervention15 of 1613 model studies, 2 RCTs
Li 2015 [34]Type 2 diabetesAdultsPharmacotherapy7 of 85 model studies, 2 RCTs
Li 2015 [34]Type 2 diabetesAdultsScreening2 of 33 model studies
Li 2015 [34]Type 2 diabetesAdultsPrimary care intervention1 of 11 model study
Li 2015 [34]Type 2 diabetesAdultsDietary intervention1 of 11 model study
Zhou 2020 [35]Type 2 diabetesAdultsLifestyle intervention17 of 2011 model studies, 6 RCTs
Zhou 2020 [35]Type 2 diabetesAdultsScreening + lifestyle intervention4 of 74 model studies
Zhou 2020 [35]Type 2 diabetesAdultsScreening + pharmacotherapy2 of 22 model studies
Zhou 2020 [35]Type 2 diabetesAdultsScreening + physical activity intervention1 of 11 model study
Zhou 2020 [35]Type 2 diabetesAdultsScreening + diet intervention1 of 11 model study
Zhou 2020 [35]Type 2 diabetesAdultsScreening1 of 11 model study
Dental caries
Anopa 2020 [36]Dental cariesChildrenMulticomponent intervention8 of 104 model studies, 1 RCT, 1 cohort study, 2 non-RCTs
Anopa 2020 [36]Dental cariesChildrenFluoride treatment3 of 41 model studies, 2 non-RCTs
Anopa 2020 [36]Dental cariesChildrenMolar sealant3 of 33 model studies
Anopa 2020 [36]Dental cariesChildrenOral hygiene and diet education1 of 11 non-RCT
Fraihat 2019 [37]Dental cariesChildrenMulticomponent intervention5 of 72 model studies, 3 RCTs
Fraihat 2019 [37]Dental cariesChildrenEducation1 of 41 model study
Fraihat 2019 [37]Dental cariesChildrenTeeth brushing2 of 31 model study, 1 RCT
Fraihat 2019 [37]Dental cariesChildrenFluoride varnish1 of 31 RCT
Fraihat 2019 [37]Dental cariesChildrenScreening0 of 2N/A
Fraihat 2019 [37]Dental cariesChildrenCounselling0 of 1N/A
Public health
Ashton 2020 [22]BreastfeedingPost-partum womenBreastfeeding promotion programme1 of 11 case study
Ashton 2020 [22]Post-natal depressionPost-partum womenCommunity-based support programme1 of 11 case study
Ashton 2020 [22]Behavioural problemsParents and childrenBehaviour management programme for parents/families4 of 44 case studies
Ashton 2020 [22]Substance misuseParents and childrenSubstance misuse programme1 of 11 case study
Ashton 2020 [22]General healthChildrenChildcare programme1 of 11 case study
Ashton 2020 [22]General healthChildrenSchool music programme1 of 11 case study
Ashton 2020 [22]Substance misuseAdolescentsSubstance misuse programme2 of 22 case studies
Ashton 2020 [22]Sexual healthAdolescentsCommunity programme for the prevention of teenage pregnancy2 of 22 case studies
Ashton 2020 [22]Behavioural problemsAdolescentsSporting programme1 of 11 case study
Ashton 2020 [22]Behavioural problemsAdolescentsCommunity programme1 of 11 case study
Ashton 2020 [22]Mental healthAdultsTraining and employment programme3 of 33 case studies
Ashton 2020 [22]Mental healthAdultsEducation1 of 11 case study
Ashton 2020 [22]Mental healthAdultsLiving assistance community programme1 of 11 case study
Ashton 2020 [22]General healthAdultsCommunity family programme1 of 21 case study
Ashton 2020 [22]SmokingAdultsSmoking cessation programme1 of 11 case study
Ashton 2020 [22]Substance misuseAdultsSubstance misuse programme1 of 11 case study
Ashton 2020 [22]Mental healthOlder adultsCreative arts programme4 of 44 case studies
Ashton 2020 [22]Mental healthOlder adultsHome care programme1 of 11 case study
Ashton 2020 [22]Mental healthOlder adultsPeer support groups1 of 11 case study
Ashton 2020 [22]General healthUniversalCommunity programme1 of 11 case study
Ashton 2020 [22]General healthUniversalHealthy eating programme1 of 11 case study
Ashton 2020 [22]Chronic diseaseUniversalLifestyle intervention2 of 22 case studies
Ashton 2020 [22]Sedentary behaviourUniversalPhysical activity intervention3 of 33 case studies
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]Post-natal depressionPost-partum womenCommunity programme1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]Sexual healthParents and childrenSexual health intervention2 of 22 case studies
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]Chronic diseaseParents and childrenMobility equipment service1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]Substance misuseParents and childrenSupport programme1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]AsthmaChildrenCommunity asthma programme1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]Poor dietary behavioursChildrenSchool breakfast programme1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]General healthChildren and adolescentsGeneral healthcare intervention1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]Sexual healthAdolescentsSexual health intervention1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]Mental healthAdultsSkills training and employment programme3 of 33 case studies
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]Mental healthAdultsClubhouse for mental health support1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]Mental healthAdultsMental health awareness training courses1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]Mental healthAdultsReading programme1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]SuicideAdultsSupport programme1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]Substance misuseAdultsRecovery programme2 of 22 case studies
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]Substance misuseAdultsSelf-management course1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]Substance misuseAdultsSkills training and employment1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]SmokingAdultsSmoking cessation policy1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]Sedentary behaviourAdultsWalking programme3 of 33 case studies
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]HIVAdultsStigma and discrimination training1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]HIV and AIDsAdultsFootball support programme1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]Spinal cord injuryAdultsCommunity rehabilitation programme1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]Chronic diseaseAdultsSelf-care training1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]General healthAdultsIntegrated healthcare1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]Poor nutritionOlder adultsMeals home delivery programme2 of 22 case studies
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]Mental healthOlder adultsMental health support programme1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]General health and HIVUniversalCommunity-based care and support1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]HIV and AIDSUniversalCommunity-based care and support1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]HIVUniversalAdherence to anti-retroviral therapies intervention1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]General healthUniversalHospital-based services1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]Environmental healthUniversalHousehold-based water treatment and safe storage1 of 11 case study
Banke-Thomas 2015 [38]Chronic diseaseUniversalHealthy lifestyle intervention2 of 22 case studies
Masters 2017 [21]SmokingPregnant womenSmoking cessation programme1 of 11 RCT
Masters 2017 [21]InfluenzaPost-partum womenInfluenza vaccination programme1 of 11 model study
Masters 2017 [21]Haemophilus influenzae type bChildrenHaemophilus influenzae type b vaccination programme2 of 22 model studies
Masters 2017 [21]General healthChildrenEarly education programme2 of 21 RCT and 1 matched cohort study
Masters 2017 [21]General healthParents and childrenEarly education programme1 of 11 matched cohort study
Masters 2017 [21]Child behaviourParents and childrenParenting programme1 of 11 model study
Masters 2017 [21]Environmental healthChildrenHousehold lead paint hazard control1 of 11 model study
Masters 2017 [21]General healthAdolescentsMultisystematic therapy1 of 11 RCT
Masters 2017 [21]Chronic diseaseAdultsWorkplace health promotion3 of 41 quasi experimental study, 1 pre–post study, 1 case study
Masters 2017 [21]Chronic diseaseAdultsMedication management2 of 21 controlled intervention study, 1 cohort matched control study
Masters 2017 [21]Chronic diseaseAdultsPrevention programme1 of 11 cohort matched control study
Masters 2017 [21]Heart diseaseAdultsDisease management programme1 of 11 cohort study
Masters 2017 [21]Heart diseaseAdultsHome blood pressure monitoring1 of 11 model study
Masters 2017 [21]Heart diseaseAdultsTobacco cessation1 of 11 model study
Masters 2017 [21]HIVAdultsNeedle and syringe programme4 of 43 model studies, 1 mixed methods study
Masters 2017 [21]HIVAdultsHIV testing1 of 11 model study
Masters 2017 [21]HIVAdultsHIV counselling, testing, referral, and partner notification services1 of 11 model study
Masters 2017 [21]Mental healthAdultsAwareness campaign0 of 1N/A
Masters 2017 [21]Mental healthAdultsTelemedicine for depression1 of 11 model study
Masters 2017 [21]Work-related injuriesAdultsWorkplace health promotion2 of 21 RCT, 1 controlled intervention study
Masters 2017 [21]Alcohol misuseAdultsTherapeutic services for alcoholism1 of 11 cross-sectional study
Masters 2017 [21]ObesityAdultsWorkplace obesity management1 of 11 model study
Masters 2017 [21]Sexual healthAdultsFamily planning services1 of 11 model study
Masters 2017 [21]InfluenzaAdultsInfluenza vaccination0 of 1N/A
Masters 2017 [21]Fall-related injuriesOlder adultsCommunity-based fall prevention1 of 11 model study
Masters 2017 [21]Chronic diseaseUniversalPreventive programme2 of 21 model study, 1 mixed methods study
Masters 2017 [21]Sedentary behaviourUniversalBike and pedestrian trails2 of 22 model studies
Masters 2017 [21]SmokingUniversalSmoking cessation1 of 11 model study
Masters 2017 [21]TobaccoUniversalProgrammes to reduce tobacco consumption1 of 11 mixed methods study
Masters 2017 [21]Hepatitis BUniversalHepatitis B vaccination1 of 11 model study
Masters 2017 [21]Haemophilus influenzae type bUniversalHib vaccination1 of 11 mixed methods study
Masters 2017 [21]Measles, mumps, and rubellaUniversalMMR vaccination0 of 11 mixed methods study
Masters 2017 [21]MeaslesUniversalMeasles vaccination1 of 11 mixed methods study
Masters 2017 [21]HIV/AIDSUniversalHIV/AIDS prevention programme1 of 11 mixed methods study
Masters 2017 [21]Vehicle-related injuryUniversalRoad safety campaigns1 of 11 mixed methods study
Reeves 2019 [39]Infection controlChildrenEducation intervention for healthcare providers for immunisation practices0 of 1N/A
Reeves 2019 [39]Sedentary behaviourAdolescentsMulticomponent school-based physical activity intervention1 of 11 RCT
Reeves 2019 [39]Breast cancerAdultsEducation and counselling for screening1 of 21 model study
Reeves 2019 [39]Breast cancerAdultsFinancial incentives and tailored messaging for screening1 of 11 RCT
Reeves 2019 [39]Breast cancerAdultsEducation, counselling, and healthcare provider education for screening1 of 11 RCT
Reeves 2019 [39]Breast cancerAdultsMammography promotion2 of 22 RCTs
Reeves 2019 [39]Breast and cervical cancerAdultsEducation and counselling for screening1 of 11 RCT
Reeves 2019 [39]Cervical cancerAdultsTailored message, education, and counselling for screening0 of 1N/A
Reeves 2019 [39]Colorectal cancerAdultsPublic awareness for screening0 of 1N/A
Reeves 2019 [39]Alcohol misuseAdultsPublic awareness for alcohol consumption behaviours1 of 11 RCT
Reeves 2019 [39]Poor dietary patterns and sedentary behaviourAdultsTailored message, education, and counselling0 of 1N/A
Reeves 2019 [39]InfluenzaOlder adultsPublic awareness for influenza vaccination1 of 11 model study
Chronic disease
Dubas-Jakobczyk, 2017 [40]FallsOlder adultsPhysical exercise11 of 125 RCTs, 5 model studies, 1 controlled trial
Dubas-Jakobczyk, 2017 [40]FallsOlder adultsMultifactorial intervention6 of 114 model studies, 1 RCT, 1 controlled trial
Dubas-Jakobczyk, 2017 [40]FallsOlder adultsHome assessment and modifications4 of 53 model studies, 1 RCT
Dubas-Jakobczyk, 2017 [40]FallsOlder adultsMedication withdrawal3 of 33 model studies
Dubas-Jakobczyk, 2017 [40]FallsOlder adultsVitamin D and/or calcium supplementation2 of 22 model studies
Dubas-Jakobczyk, 2017 [40]FallsOlder adultsCardiac pacing1 of 21 model study
Dubas-Jakobczyk, 2017 [40]FallsOlder adultsExpedited cataract surgery1 of 11 model study
Dubas-Jakobczyk, 2017 [40]FallsOlder adultsGait-stabilizing device1 of 11 model study
Dubas-Jakobczyk, 2017 [40]General health statusOlder adultsPhysical exercise3 of 32 RCTs, 1 controlled trial
Dubas-Jakobczyk, 2017 [40]General health statusOlder adultsHome assessment and modifications1 of 21 RCT
Dubas-Jakobczyk, 2017 [40]Sedentary behaviourOlder adultsPhysical exercise0 of 1N/A
Dubas-Jakobczyk, 2017 [40]Oral healthOlder adultsEducation0 of 1N/A
Gordon 2007 [41]SmokingAdultsCounselling7 of 73 model studies, 2 RCTs, 1 controlled intervention study, 1 pre–post study
Gordon 2007 [41]SmokingAdultsCounselling + NRT7 of 74 model studies, 3 RCTs
Gordon 2007 [41]SmokingAdultsCounselling + non-NRT4 of 43 model studies, 1 RCT
Gordon 2007 [41]SmokingAdultsNRT1 of 11 pre–post study
Gordon 2007 [41]SmokingAdultsNon-NRT1 of 11 pre–post study
Gordon 2007 [41]SmokingAdultsSelf-help material0 of 1N/A
Gordon 2007 [41]SmokingAdultsCold turkey1 of 11 pre–post study
Gordon 2007 [41]SmokingPregnant womenSmoking cessation programme for pregnant women0 of 1N/A
Gordon 2007 [41]Alcohol use disorderAdultsCounselling4 of 62 model studies, 1 RCT, 1 randomised trial
Gordon 2007 [41]Alcohol use disorderAdultsPrimary care intervention1 of 21 comparative study
Gordon 2007 [41]Alcohol use disorderAdultsOutpatient treatment0 of 1N/A
Gordon 2007 [41]Alcohol use disorderAdultsPharmacotherapy1 of 11 RCT
Gordon 2007 [41]Alcohol use disorderAdultsScreening1 of 11 model study
Gordon 2007 [41]Alcohol use disorderAdultsSelf-help material1 of 11 RCT
Gordon 2007 [41]Alcohol use disorderFamiliesCounselling1 of 11 RCT
Gordon 2007 [41]Drug useAdolescentsCounselling1 of 11 model study
Gordon 2007 [41]Weight managementAdultsCounselling0 of 1N/A
Gordon 2007 [41]Weight managementAdultsDietary intervention0 of 1N/A
Gordon 2007 [41]Weight managementAdultsMultifactorial programme2 of 21 model study, 1 RCT
Gordon 2007 [41]Weight managementChildrenSchool programme1 of 11 model study
Gordon 2007 [41]Diabetes managementAdultsCounselling1 of 11 model study
Gordon 2007 [41]Diabetes managementAdultsDietary intervention1 of 21 model study
Gordon 2007 [41]Diabetes managementAdultsPrimary care intervention1 of 11 model study
Gordon 2007 [41]Diabetes managementParents and childrenPrimary care intervention0 of 11 RCT
Gordon 2007 [41]Diabetes managementAdultsMultidisciplinary care1 of 11 quasi-experimental study
Gordon 2007 [41]Diabetes managementAdultsMultifactorial programme1 of 21 model study
Gordon 2007 [41]Diabetes managementAdultsPharmacotherapy1 of 11 model study
Gordon 2007 [41]Diabetes managementAdultsSurgery1 of 11 model study
Gordon 2007 [41]Cardiovascular disease preventionAdultsCounselling0 of 1N/A
Gordon 2007 [41]Cardiovascular disease preventionAdultsCounselling + pharmacotherapy0 of 1N/A
Gordon 2007 [41]Cardiovascular disease preventionAdultsDietary intervention0 of 1N/A
Gordon 2007 [41]Cardiovascular disease preventionAdultsPrimary care intervention0 of 1N/A
Gordon 2007 [41]Cardiovascular disease preventionAdultsMultifactorial programme5 of 72 model studies, 2 RCT, 1 cross-sectional study
Gordon 2007 [41]Cardiovascular disease preventionAdultsPhysical activity intervention4 of 52 model studies, 2 RCTs
Gordon 2007 [41]Cardiovascular disease preventionAdultsScreening0 of 1N/A
Gordon 2007 [41]Cardiovascular disease preventionAdultsScreening + counselling + pharmacotherapy1 of 11 RCT
Gordon 2007 [41]Cardiovascular disease preventionAdultsSurgery1 of 21 model study
Gordon 2007 [41]Chronic disease preventionAdultsPrimary care intervention1 of 11 RCT
Gordon 2007 [41]Chronic disease preventionAdultsGP + dietitian intervention2 of 22 RCTs
Gordon 2007 [41]Chronic disease preventionAdultsPhysical activity intervention3 of 62 model studies, 1 RCT
Mattli 2020 [42]Sedentary behaviourAdultsPhysical activity8 of 108 RCTs
Pennington 2013 [43]Chronic disease managementAdultsSelf-care support skills1 of 11 RCT
Pennington 2013 [43]Diabetes managementAdultsTelehealth intervention0 of 1N/A
Pennington 2013 [43]Chronic disease preventionAdultsMammography promotion1 of 11 RCT
Vos 2011 [29]Alcohol misuseAdultsBrief intervention from GPs1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Alcohol misuseAdultsBrief intervention and telemarketing
and support
1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Tobacco misuseAdultsCessation aid: varenicline1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Tobacco misuseAdultsCessation aid: bupropion1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Tobacco misuseAdultsCessation aid: nicotine replacement
therapy
1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Sedentary behaviourAdultsWearing pedometers1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Sedentary behaviourAdultsProgramme to encourage more active transport1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Sedentary behaviourAdultsGP prescription1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Sedentary behaviourAdultsGP referral to exercise physiologist1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Sedentary behaviourAdultsInternet intervention1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Poor dietary patternsAdultsMulticomponent intervention to encourage fruit and vegetable consumption4 of 144 model studies
Vos 2011 [29]Poor dietary patternsAdultsMulticomponent workplace intervention to encourage fruit and vegetable consumption1 of 71 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Poor dietary patternsPost-partum womenMulticomponent intervention to encourage fruit and vegetable consumption0 of 2N/A
Vos 2011 [29]Excessive salt consumptionAdultsDietary advice on salt consumption0 of 1N/A
Vos 2011 [29]Unhealthy lifestyle behavioursAdultsDiet and physical activity intervention0 of 1N/A
Vos 2011 [29]Overweight and obesityAdultsDiet and physical activity intervention1 of 21 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Overweight and obesityAdultsDietary intervention1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Overweight and obesityAdultsSibutramine0 of 1N/A
Vos 2011 [29]Overweight and obesityAdultsOrlistat0 of 1N/A
Vos 2011 [29]Overweight and obesityAdultsSurgery1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]High blood pressure
and cholesterol
AdultsUsual care1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]High blood pressure
and cholesterol
AdultsCommunity heart health programme1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]High blood pressure
and cholesterol
AdultsDietary intervention2 of 32 model studies
Vos 2011 [29]High blood pressure
and cholesterol
AdultsStatins1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]High blood pressure
and cholesterol
AdultsStatins and ezitimibe1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]High blood pressure
and cholesterol
AdultsLow-dose diuretics1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]High blood pressure
and cholesterol
AdultsBeta blockers1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]High blood pressure
and cholesterol
AdultsCCBs1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]High blood pressure
and cholesterol
AdultsACE inhibitors1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]High blood pressure
and cholesterol
AdultsAspirin1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]High blood pressure
and cholesterol
AdultsPolypill2 of 22 model studies
Vos 2011 [29]OsteoporosisAdultsScreening and
alendronate
1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]OsteoporosisAdultsScreening and
raloxifene
0 of 1N/A
Vos 2011 [29]Substance misuseChildren and adolescentsSchool-based drug prevention programme0 of 1N/A
Vos 2011 [29]Cervical cancerAdultsScreening4 of 64 model studies
Vos 2011 [29]Skin careUniversalSuncare programme1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Prostate cancerAdultsScreening0 of 1N/A
Vos 2011 [29]Hepatitis BChildrenHepatitis B vaccination4 of 44 model studies
Vos 2011 [29]Pre-diabetesAdultsScreening and dietary intervention1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Pre-diabetesAdultsScreening and exercise intervention1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Pre-diabetesAdultsScreening, diet and exercise intervention1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Pre-diabetesAdultsScreening and pharmacotherapy2 of 42 model studies
Vos 2011 [29]Kidney diseaseAdultsScreening and early treatment2 of 22 model studies
Vos 2011 [29]DepressionPost-partum womenScreening and psychological treatment1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]DepressionChildren and adolescentsScreening and psychological treatment1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]DepressionChildren and adolescentsScreening and bibliotherapy1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]DepressionAdultsScreening and bibliotherapy1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]DepressionAdultsScreening and psychological treatment1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Self-harm/
suicide
AdultsProblem-solving therapy1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]PsychosisAdultsTreatment for individuals at ultra-high
risk for psychosis
1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Child anxiety disordersParentsParenting intervention1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Macular
degeneration
AdultsRanibizumab0 of 1N/A
Vos 2011 [29]Dental healthChildren and adolescentsAnnual dental check0 of 3N/A
Vos 2011 [29]Alcohol misuseAdultsResidential treatment and naltrexone0 of 2N/A
Vos 2011 [29]Alcohol misuseAdultsResidential treatment0 of 2N/A
Vos 2011 [29]Cannabis dependenceAdultsCBT1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Breast cancerAdultsTrastuzumab1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Kidney diseaseAdultsRenal replacement therapy1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Kidney diseaseAdultsDialysis0 of 1N/A
Vos 2011 [29]DepressionAdultsCBT4 of 44 model studies
Vos 2011 [29]DepressionAdultsSSRI2 of 22 model studies
Vos 2011 [29]DepressionAdultsTCA2 of 22 model studies
Vos 2011 [29]DepressionAdultsBibliotherapy1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]PsychosisAdultsPsychosis prevention1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Cardiovascular diseaseAdultsAngioplasty coated stents1 of 21 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Cardiovascular diseaseAdultsBypass surgery and stents0 of 1N/A
Vos 2011 [29]Cardiovascular diseaseAdultsEarly stenting1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Cardiovascular diseaseAdultsRehabilitation1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]AsthmaAdultsAsthma clinic1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]OsteoarthritisAdultsHip replacement for osteoarthritis1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]OsteoarthritisAdultsKnee replacement for osteoarthritis1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Peptic ulcer
disease
AdultsEradication with triple therapy1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]ShinglesAdultsVaccination0 of 1N/A
Vos 2011 [29]InfluenzaAdultsVaccination0 of 1N/A
Vos 2011 [29]HIVAdultsNeedle exchange programme1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]HIVAdultsIntermittent pre-exposure prophylaxis1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]HIVAdultsCircumcision1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]HIVAdultsEarly anti-retrovirals0 of 1N/A
Vos 2011 [29]HIVAdultsPost-exposure prophylaxis0 of 1N/A
Vos 2011 [29]Blood pressure
and cholesterol
Adults (Indigenous)Lifestyle intervention0 of 1N/A
Vos 2011 [29]Blood pressure
and cholesterol
Adults (Indigenous)Statins0 of 1N/A
Vos 2011 [29]Blood pressure
and cholesterol
Adults (Indigenous)ACE inhibitors0 of 1N/A
Vos 2011 [29]Blood pressure
and cholesterol
Adults (Indigenous)Polypill1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]HBVChildrenVaccination3 of 33 model studies
Vos 2011 [29]Pre-diabetesAdults (Indigenous)Screening and dietary intervention1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Pre-diabetesAdults (Indigenous)Screening and exercise intervention1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Pre-diabetesAdults (Indigenous)Screening, diet and exercise intervention1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Pre-diabetesAdults (Indigenous)Screening and rosiglitazone0 of 1N/A
Vos 2011 [29]Pre-diabetesAdults (Indigenous)Screening and metformin1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Pre-diabetesAdults (Indigenous)Screening and acarbose1 of 11 model study
Vos 2011 [29]Pre-diabetesAdults (Indigenous)Screening and orlistat0 of 1N/A
Vos 2011 [29]Kidney diseaseAdults (Indigenous)Screening and early treatment2 of 22 model studies
Vos 2011 [29]Kidney diseaseAdults (Indigenous)Dialysis0 of 1N/A
Vos 2011 [29]Kidney diseaseAdults (Indigenous)Renal replacement therapy1 of 11 model study
Sexual health
Bloch 2021 [44]Sexual healthAdolescents and adultsScreening for chlamydia trachomatis18 of 2418 model studies
Bloch 2021 [44]Sexual healthAdolescents and adultsScreening for gonorrhoea and chlamydia trachomatis2 of 32 model studies
Bloch 2021 [44]Sexual healthAdolescents and adultsScreening for gonorrhoea1 of 21 model studies
Bloch 2021 [44]Sexual healthAdolescents and adultsSTI screening0 of 1N/A
Bloch 2021 [44]Sexual healthAdolescents and adultsScreening for HIV0 of 1N/A
Immunisation
Boccalini, 2021 [45]InfluenzaChildren and adolescentsInfluenza vaccinations7 of 87 model studies
Smoking cessation
Cheung, 2017 [46]SmokingAdultsCounselling session + self-help education materials2 of 32 RCTs
Cheung, 2017 [46]SmokingAdultsSelf-help material1 of 11 RCT
Lee, 2019 [47]SmokingAdultsCounselling session + self-help education materials6 of 63 RCTs, 3 model studies
Lee, 2019 [47]SmokingAdultsCounselling + NRT + self-help education materials1 of 11 model study
Lee, 2019 [47]SmokingAdultsGP advice + counselling1 of 11 RCT
Lee, 2019 [47]SmokingAdultsScreening, counselling + NRT1 of 11 model study
Lee, 2019 [47]SmokingAdultsCounselling session + NRT + self-help education materials1 of 11 model study
Mahmoudi, 2012 [48]SmokingAdultsVarenicline (non-nicotine therapy)9 of 109 model studies
Reduce alcohol
Kruse, 2020 [49]Alcohol abuse and addictionGeneral populationTelemedicine intervention1 of 11 model study
Fractures
Ganda 2013 [50]Osteoporotic fracturesAdultsMultidisciplinary care model1 of 31 model study
Ganda 2013 [50]Osteoporotic fracturesAdultsOsteoporosis care with case coordinator1 of 21 model study
Wu, 2018 [51]Osteoporotic fracturesAdultsMultidisciplinary care model11 of 1211 model studies
Wu, 2018 [51]Osteoporotic fracturesAdultsOsteoporosis care with case coordinator3 of 33 model studies
Wu, 2018 [51]Osteoporotic fracturesAdultsAnti-osteoporosis medication1 of 11 cohort study
Wu, 2018 [51]Osteoporotic fracturesAdultsScreening programme1 of 21 model study
ACE, Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor; AIDS, Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome; CCB, Calcium channel blockers, CBT, Cognitive behavioural therapy; GP, General practitioner; HIV, Human immunodeficiency virus; MMR, Measles, mumps, and rubella, N/A, Not applicable, NRT, Nicotine replacement therapy; RCT, Randomised control trial, SSRI, Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor; STI, Sexually transmitted infection; TCA, Tricyclic antidepressant.
Figure A1. Countries in which the studies were conducted included in the reviews (n = 26) [18,21,22,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50,51].
Figure A1. Countries in which the studies were conducted included in the reviews (n = 26) [18,21,22,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50,51].
Ijerph 20 06139 g0a1

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Figure 1. Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) depicting the identification, screening, and inclusion of reviews.
Figure 1. Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) depicting the identification, screening, and inclusion of reviews.
Ijerph 20 06139 g001
Table 1. Keywords included in search strategy.
Table 1. Keywords included in search strategy.
ConstructSearch Terms
Study designReview
PreventionPrimary prevention, secondary prevention, health promotion
EconomicCost effectiveness, value for money, cost benefit analysis, cost utility analysis, cost consequence analysis, return on investment, social return on investment, cost minimisation analysis, economic evaluation, cost saving, cost efficient
ContextHealthcare service, public health a
a “Local public health services” was not used as search term but introduced during screening process.
Table 2. Scoping review inclusion and exclusion criteria.
Table 2. Scoping review inclusion and exclusion criteria.
CriteriaIncludeExclude
Date2005 to February 2022Pre-2005
LanguageEnglishNon-English language
CountryHigh-income 1 countriesLow-income countries, Whole regions (e.g., European Union), Global data
Publication,
Study Design
Systematic review, Umbrella review, Aggregate report or evaluationThesis, Narrative review, Editorial, Discussion, Protocol, Conference abstract
PopulationHuman studies, Universal or population groups, including priority populations, any age or sexAnimal or In vitro studies
Concept 1: PreventionPrimary and/or secondary prevention, (e.g., Smoking, Nutrition, Alcohol, Physical activity, High cholesterol etc.)Primordial, tertiary, or quaternary prevention, Pharmacotherapy for treatment of established disease, medical devices, COVID-19
Concept 2: EconomicFull economic evaluation (cost-effectiveness analysis, cost–benefit analysis, cost–utility analysis, cost–consequence analysis, cost-minimisation analysis), Return on investment, Value for money, Social return on investmentMethodological paper or framework, Partial economic evaluation (e.g., costing study)
ContextPublic health service/setting/local public health services as the provider of Concept 1National- or state-level strategies/initiatives (e.g., regulation, taxation, mass media campaigns, transport, infrastructure, urban planning), Privatised health systems, Workplaces
1 Maximum of 25% of studies in the review from middle-income countries.
Table 3. Criteria for evaluating the economic evidence from the systematic reviews.
Table 3. Criteria for evaluating the economic evidence from the systematic reviews.
Assessment CategoriesCriteria
Cost-effective
  • 5 or more studies were included in the systematic review
  • ≥70% of studies or interventions were cost-effective or
  • median ICERs < USD 50,000 or GBP 30,000
Not cost-effective
  • 5 or more studies were included in the systematic review
  • ≥70% of studies or interventions were not cost-effective or
  • median ICERs > USD 50,000 or GBP 30,000
Lack of evidence
  • <5 studies were included in the systematic review
Unclear
  • Findings from the studies were mixed or inconclusive or
  • the studies included were too heterogeneous to draw conclusions
ICER, Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio.
Table 4. Characteristics of included systematic reviews.
Table 4. Characteristics of included systematic reviews.
First Author, YearNo. of
Countries Included
Date Range of
Publications
Aim of the Systematic ReviewPopulation
Included
Sample Size of Included Studies,
Median
(Min, Max)
Prevention Type (Primary, Secondary)
Mental Health
Le, 2021 [30]20 a2007 to 2020To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of mental health promotion and prevention interventionsUniversal407 b
(51, 12,864)
Primary
Park, 2013 [31]32000 to 2012To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of physical health promotion interventionsAdults and older adults with clinically diagnosed mental health disorders232 b
(87, 2160)
Secondary
Soneson, 2020 [18]12007 to 2017To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of psychological interventions for psychotic experiences cAdolescents and adults with
psychotic
experiences
196
(196, 196)
Secondary
Obesity
Lehnert, 2012 [32]7 a2006 to 2017To evaluate the long-term (≥40 years) cost-effectiveness of
obesity prevention interventions
UniversalNRPrimary
Type 2 diabetes
Glechner, 2018 [33]8 a2003 to 2016To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of lifestyle intervention for the prevention of T2D and secondary diseases cAdults with pre-diabetesNRPrimary
Li, 2015 [34]10 a1998 to 2014To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of diet and physical activity promotion for the prevention of T2DAdults and older adults at increased risk of T2D3234 b
(552, 3887)
Primary
Zhou, 2020 [35]9 a2008 to 2017To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of T2D prevention interventionsAdolescents, adults, and older adults at high-risk of T2D and universalNRPrimary
Dental caries
Anopa, 2020 [36]6 a1986 to 2017To review economic evaluations on primary caries prevention interventionsPre-school
children
964 b
(161, 209,285)
Primary
Fraihat, 2019 [37]8 a1976 to 2018To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of primary caries prevention interventions for dental diseases cPre-school and primary aged children419 b
(51, 209,285)
Primary
Public health
Ashton, 2020 [22]62007 to 2019To evaluate SROI and SCBA evidence of public health interventions for health and well-beingUniversalNRPrimary
Banke-Thomas, 2015 [38]11 a2005 to 2014To assess studies where SROI has been applied in public health, lessons learnt, and recommendations for futureUniversalNRPrimary
Masters, 2017 [21]61976 to 2015To evaluate the return of investment of public health interventionsUniversal1454 b
(123, 16,375)
Primary
Reeves, 2019 [39]52000 to 2017To review economic evaluations of strategies for enhancing the implementation of public health interventions and policiesUniversalNRPrimary
Chronic disease
Dubas-Jakobczyk, 2017 [40]112000 to 2015To review the cost-effectiveness of health promotion and/or primary prevention programmes for chronic diseaseOlder adults412 b
(76, 33,152)
Primary
Gordon, 2007 [41]71995 to 2005To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of face-to-face health behaviour interventions for smoking, physical activity, diet, and alcohol for the prevention of chronic diseaseAdultsNRPrimary
Mattli, 2020 [42]52000 to 2018To review the literature from RCT-based economic evaluations of physical activity interventions outside the workplace setting for chronic disease preventionAdults and older adults911
(51, 2140)
Primary
Pennington, 2013 [43]22002 to 2006To synthesise the evidence on cost-effectiveness of health-related lifestyle advice delivered by peer or lay advisors for chronic disease prevention cAdultsNRPrimary
Vos, 2011 [29]12003To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of preventive interventions for non-communicable diseasesUniversalNRPrimary,
secondary
Sexual health
Bloch, 2021 [44]72000 to 2018To synthesise the economic evidence on interventions for the prevention and management of sexually transmitted infections and HIVAdolescents and adultsNRPrimary,
secondary
Immunisation
Boccalini, 2021 [45]52013 to 2020To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of influenza vaccinationChildrenNRPrimary
Smoking cessation
Cheung, 2017 [46]12013 to 2016To review the cost-effectiveness of eHealth smoking cessation
interventions
AdultsNRSecondary
Lee, 2019 [47]51993 to 2016To appraise the methodological quality and evaluate
cost-effectiveness studies of inpatient smoking cessation programmes
Adults hospitalised with any conditions433 b
(224, 4404)
Secondary
Mahmoudi, 2012 [48]82008 to 2010To review the cost-effectiveness of non-nicotine therapies for smoking cessation, compare the types of models used, and determine if any variables impact on the cost-effectivenessAdultsNRSecondary
Reducing alcohol
Kruse, 2020 [49]12011To evaluate cost-effectiveness of telemedicine for the management of alcohol abuse, addiction, and rehabilitation cAdults with
alcohol use
disorder
1,216,000
(1,216,000, 1,216,000)
Secondary
Fractures
Ganda, 2013 [50]42007 to 2011To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of secondary preventions for osteoporotic fractures cAdults and older adults1140
(349, 620,000)
Secondary
Wu, 2018 [51]62007 to 2017To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of fracture liaison services or secondary fracture preventive programmesAdults and older adults1000 b
(100, 10,000)
Secondary
a <25% from middle-income countries; b not all studies in review reported sample size; c clinical efficacy of the interventions was also evaluated. HIV, Human immunodeficiency virus; NR, Not reported; RCT, Randomised control trial; SCBA, Social cost–benefit analysis; SROI, Social return on investment; STI, Sexually transmitted infections; T2D, Type 2 diabetes.
Table 5. Priority populations a of included systematic reviews.
Table 5. Priority populations a of included systematic reviews.
First Author, YearIndigenous bCulturally and
Linguistically
Diverse
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer or Questioning, Intersex, and/or Other Sexuality and Gender DiverseMental IllnessLow Socioeconomic StatusDisabilityRural,
Regional, Remote
Anopa, 2020 [36] X
Ashton, 2020 [22] XXX
Banke-Thomas, 2015 [38] XX
Bloch, 2021 [44] X X
Boccalini, 2021 [45]
Cheung, 2017 [46]
Dubas-Jakobczyk, 2017 [40] X
Fraihat, 2019 [37] X
Ganda, 2013 [50]
Glechner, 2018 [33] X
Gordon, 2007 [41]
Kruse, 2020 [49] X
Le, 2021 [30] X
Lee, 2019 [47] X X
Lehnert, 2012 [32]
Li, 2015 [34] X X
Mahmoudi, 2012 [48] X
Masters, 2017 [21] XXX
Mattli, 2020 [42]
Park, 2013 [31] X XXX
Pennington, 2013 [43] X X X
Reeves, 2019 [39] X X
Soneson, 2020 [18] X X
Vos, 2010 [29]X a XX XX
Wu, 2018 [51] X
Zhou, 2020 [35] X XX
X indicates that the study sample included the specified priority population. a Priority populations identified in the National Preventive Health Strategy [4]; b Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, Australia.
Table 6. Economic evaluation methods, risk of bias assessment, and key findings.
Table 6. Economic evaluation methods, risk of bias assessment, and key findings.
First Author, YearNo. of
Economic
Evaluation Studies
Economic
Analysis Method Used
Study DesignRisk of Bias Methodological Assessment Tool UsedEconomic
Outcomes
Key Economic Findings Reported by the Reviews
Mental health
Le, 2021 [30]65CEA,
CUA,
ROI
30 RCTs,
29 simulation models,
2 quasi,
2 pre–post,
1 cross-sectional,
1 ecological
Quality of Health Economic Studies InstrumentQALYs
DALYs,
ICER
In children and adolescents (<18 years) (n = 23 studies): interventions targeted depression (n = 7), anxiety (n = 4), behaviour (n = 3), suicide (n = 4), eating disorders (n = 2), cannabis use (n = 1), maltreatment (n = 1), and general mental health (n = 1). In children and adolescents, screening plus psychological interventions at school and parenting interventions were the most cost-effective interventions. In adults (18 to 65 years) (n = 35 studies): interventions targeted depression (n = 11), suicide (n = 8), general mental health (n = 7), eating disorders (n = 2), psychosis (n = 2), substance use (n = 1), anxiety (n = 1), and panic disorder (n = 1). In adults, screening plus psychological interventions were shown to be cost-effective. In older adults (>65 years) (n = 7 studies): interventions targeted depression (n = 6), anxiety (n = 4), and general mental health (n = 1). The cost-effectiveness of mental health interventions in older adults is inconclusive due to limited evidence.
Park, 2013 [31]11CCA,
CEA,
CUA
8 RCTs,
2 simulation models,
1 pre–post
No tool usedIncremental cost per: successful quit, life year gained, QALY gainedInterventions targeted sedentary behaviour (n = 3), substance misuse (n = 3 studies), infectious diseases (n = 4), and smoking (n = 1). Physical activity interventions ranged from cost-effective for supervised walks (99.9% probability) and tailored exercise programmes (89.0%) to not cost-effective for facilitated support (57.0%). Substance abuse support programmes using case managers were not cost-effective. The cost-effectiveness of HIV interventions was gender specific or they were not cost-effective. The prevention or management of blood-borne disease using mobile specialist teams was evaluated, however, the cost-effectiveness of this intervention was unclear. Multistrategy smoking cessation programme in outpatient setting was cost-effective (74.0%).
Soneson, 2020 [18]2CEA,
CUA
2 RCTsDrummond Critical
Appraisal of Economic Evaluations Checklist
Transition to psychosis averted,
QALYs
CEA found routine care plus CBT had a 64% probability of being cost-effective at 18 months and 83% at 4 years compared with routine care. CUA found routine care plus CBT had an 83% probability of being cost-effective at 18 months and 86% at 4 years compared with routine care.
Obesity
Lehnert, 2012 [32]16CUAAll simulation modelsNo tool usedQALY,
DALY
Across the 16 publications, 21 behavioural and 12 community interventions were identified. For behavioural interventions, 16 interventions were cost-effective, 1 was cost-saving, and 5 were not cost-effective. For community interventions, 9 interventions were cost-effective and 3 were not cost-effective.
Type 2 diabetes
Li, 2015 [34]22CEA18 simulation models,
4 RCTs
Community Guide protocol for economic evaluationsCBR
ICER per LYG,
QALY saved,
DALY averted
Fifteen of sixteen studies that reported cost per QALY saved indicated that combined diet and physical activity promotion interventions were cost-effective (median of USD 13,761). Three studies reported cost savings and two studies found the interventions to be cost-effective based on cost per DALY averted (AUD 21,195 and AUD 50,707 per DALY).
Glechner, 2018 [33]14CEA8 simulation models,
6 RCTs
Drummond Critical
Appraisal of Economic Evaluations Checklist
Costs per life year gained, costs per QALY,
costs per DALY,
costs per avoided diabetes-associated outcome
Across the 13 studies (14 articles), 11 studies found that lifestyle interventions are cost-effective compared with no interventions or usual care. Cost per QALY ranged from USD 1100–1300 over a lifelong time horizon and from USD 31,500–34,500 over a 3-year time horizon.
Zhou, 2020 [35]28CEA20 simulation models,
8 RCTs
Guidelines for authors and peer reviewers of economic submissions to the British Medical JournalICER,
cost saved
In high-risk individuals, lifestyle interventions were the most cost-effective interventions (median ICERs of USD 12,520 per QALY) followed by metformin interventions (USD 17,089 per QALY). Diabetes prevention programme was the most cost-effective type of lifestyle intervention compared with non-diabetes prevention programme (USD 6212 vs. USD 13,228).
Dental caries
Anopa, 2020 [36]16CBA,
CEA,
CUA
7 simulation models
6 quasi,
2 RCTs,
1 cohort
CHEERS ChecklistICER, ACER, B/C ratio, cost per carious surface averted, cost per incremental change in dmfs, cost per tooth saved, cost per child saved from caries experience, cost per child saved from extraction experience, number of avoided restorative or surgical treatment visitsSix of fifteen studies that conducted CEA found that a dental disease management programme, education programmes, fluoridated milk and milk–cereal, and five caries prevention interventions were cost-effective. Only 1 of 2 studies that conducted CBA demonstrated benefits of a combined hand hygiene and OH promotion programme. Only 1 study reported QALY as an outcome and found that home visits and telephone intervention were dominant and cost-saving compared with usual care.
Fraihat, 2019 [37]19CEA10 RCTs,
9 simulation models
Drummond Critical
Appraisal of Economic Evaluations Checklist
Decayed, missing, filled teeth,
QALY,
dental visits
Oral health promotion was found to be effective for reducing the costs in 97 of 100 interventions (95% CI 89–99%, I2: 99%, p = 0). Sub-group analyses by age group identified that oral health promotion interventions were effective in reducing incremental cost for children 6 years and older but were not cost-effective for children less than 6 years old.
Public health
Ashton, 2020 [22]40SROI39 case studies,
1 simulation model
Krlev et al.’s frameworkCrude SROI ratioPublic health interventions were identified across the life course for the included studies which were stage 1: birth, neonatal period, post-natal period, and infancy (n = 2 studies); stage 2: childhood and adolescence (n = 17); stage 3: adulthood (main employment and reproductive years) (n = 8); and stage 4: older adulthood (n = 6), as well as studies across the life course (n = 7). Interventions during stage 1 targeted breastfeeding and crude SROI ranged from GBP 6.50 per GBP 1 invested to EUR 15.85 per EUR 1 invested. Interventions during stage 2 targeted general health and well-being, substance misuse, mental well-being, sexual health and teenage pregnancy, employment, physical activity, and anti-social behaviour. SROI ratios ranged from GBP 2 to GBP 9.20 per GBP 1 invested. Intervention during stage 3 targeted mental well-being, general health and well-being interventions, smoking, employment, and substance misuse. The SROI ratios ranged from GBP 0.66 to GBP 7 per GBP 1 invested. Interventions during stage 4 targeted mental well-being and isolation and loneliness. The SROI ratios ranged from GBP 1.20 to GBP 11 per GBP 1 invested. Across the life course interventions targeted general health and well-being, physical activity, and diet. SROI ratios ranged from GBP 44.56 per GBP 1 invested to GBP 2.56 per GBP 1 invested.
Banke-Thomas, 2015 [38]40SROI39 case studies,
1 simulation model
Krlev et al.’s frameworkSROI ratiosSROI evaluations were identified across a wide range of public health areas including health promotion (12 studies), mental health (11), sexual and reproductive health (6), child health (4), nutrition (3), healthcare management (2), health education, and environmental health (1 each). Across these studies there was a lack of agreement on who to include as beneficiaries and how to account for counterfactual and appropriate study-time horizons. Reported SROI ratios varied widely (1.1:1 to 65:1). Authors interpreted an SROI ratio > 1 as a worthwhile investment.
Masters, 2017 [21]44CEA,
ROI
23 simulation models,
4 RCTs,
5 cohort matched control,
4 quasi,
2 mixed methods,
2 case studies,
1 cohort,
1 cross-sectional,
1 pre–post
NICE
quality appraisal checklist for economic evaluations
CBR,
ROI
Public health interventions were stratified by specialism including health protection interventions, health promotion interventions, and healthcare public health interventions. The median (range) ROI and CBR were 34.2 (−21.3 to 221) and 41.8 (1.2 to 167) for health protection interventions, 2.2 (0.7 to 6.2) and 14.4 (2.0 to 29.4) for health promotion interventions, while ROI was 5.1 (1.15 to 19.35) and no studies reported a CBR for healthcare public health interventions.
Reeves, 2019 [39]14CBA,
CCA,
CEA,
CUA
12 RCTs,
2 simulation models
Drummond Critical
Appraisal of Economic Evaluations Checklist, CHEERS Checklist
ICER,
net monetary
benefit statistics,
CBR
Interventions targeted cancer, physical activity, combination of physical activity and diet, alcohol-related crime, and infectious diseases. Most studies (9 of 14) reported that public health interventions were cost-effective or had a positive cost–benefit ratio. Three studies reported that the interventions were not cost-effective while two studies made no conclusion regarding the cost-effectiveness.
Chronic disease
Dubas-Jakobczyk, 2017 [40]29CBA,
CCA,
CEA,
CUA
16 RCTs,
10 simulation models,
3 quasi
Drummond Critical
Appraisal of Economic Evaluations Checklist
QALYs, the number of falls or number of falls prevented,
avoidance of health service utilisation,
and the number of femoral/hip fracture incidents prevented or time free of these fractures
Interventions targeted falls amongst the older population, disability, general health, physical activity, and oral health. Ten interventions which predominately (80%) focused on fall prevention were cost-effective or cost-saving. For 13 studies the cost-effectiveness of the intervention was unclear. Six studies concluded that the intervention was not cost-effective.
Gordon, 2007 [41]64CEA31 RCTs,
23 simulation models,
3 quasi,
3 pre–post,
1 randomised trial,
1 cohort matched control,
1 cross-sectional study,
1 comparative study
Guidelines for authors and peer reviewers of economic submissions to the British Medical JournalICERs,
per QALY gained,
cost per LYS
Favourable cost-effectiveness was reported for smoking interventions (EUR 14,000 per QALY gained), physical activity interventions (EUR 53,119 per QALY gained), and multiple behaviour intervention in high-risk groups (cost-saving of EUR 40,094). The cost-effectiveness of alcohol and dietary interventions is unclear due to significant heterogeneity in the outcomes reported.
Mattli, 2020 [42]12CEA12 RCTsConsensus on Health
Economics Criteria List
ICER per MET hour gainedMost interventions (18 of 22) were not cost-effective and reported an ICER above the authors’ cut-off benchmark of USD 0.44–0.63 per MET hour gained.
Pennington, 2013 [43]3CEAAll RCTsQuality Assessment Tool
for Quantitative Studies
QALYs,
cost per additional mammogram,
cost per LYS
Interventions targeted general chronic disease, T2D management, and breast cancer. A chronic disease self-management programme was found to be cost-effective (94% probability). Study findings indicated a telemedicine support programme for T2D was cost-effective (GBP 43,400/quality-adjusted life year). The cost-effectiveness of mammography promotion interventions varied depending on the target population.
Vos, 2011 [29]150
interventions
CEAAll simulation modelsACE Priority Setting ChecklistDALYsSpecific topic areas that had ≥5 preventive interventions that both improved health and contributed to net cost savings or cost <USD 10,000 per DALY prevented (defined as “dominant” or “very cost-effective”) included: alcohol (7 of 9 interventions), mental disorders (7/11), tobacco (5/8), and other interventions (5/11). Specific topic areas that had ≥3 treatment interventions classified as dominant or very cost-effective included: mental disorders (5/10) and other treatment (3/6).
Sexual Health
Bloch, 2021 [44]31CBA,
CCA,
CEA,
CUA
30 simulation models, 1 pilot RCTGuidelines for authors and peer reviewers of economic submissions to the British Medical JournalMOAs, such as PID, ectopic
pregnancy, or infertility, QALYs, monetary outcomes, or the number of patients cured
Studies analysed different screening options for chlamydia trachomatis, gonorrhoea, and HIV. Sixteen found chlamydia trachomatis screening is likely to be cost-effective for those <30 years of age. Nine studies concluded that chlamydia trachomatis screening was likely to be cost-effective under certain assumptions (e.g., appropriate uptake rate). However, the remaining 4 studies did not find STI screening to be cost-effective.
Immunisation
Boccalini, 2021 [45]8CEA,
CUA
All simulation modelsNo tool usedCost/QALYs,
cost/life year
All study authors concluded that childhood influenza vaccination with live attenuated vaccine, specifically the quadrivalent formulation, was cost-effective compared with the trivalent inactivated influenza vaccine or no vaccination (ICER: GBP 7234 vs. GBP 7989 per QALY gained).
Smoking cessation
Cheung, 2017 [46]2CEA2 RCTsNo tool usedProlonged abstinenceBoth studies reported the intervention to be highly cost-effective ranging from EUR 1500 for video-based counselling to EUR 5100 for an online programme and phone-based counselling to be paid for each additional abstinent participant compared with usual care.
Lee, 2019 [47]9CEA4 RCTs,
5 simulation models
British Medical Journal’s
checklist for reporting economic
evaluations
The number of quitters,
LYGs,
QALYs,
episode of non-fatal acute myocardial infarction, death,
hospitalisation days
Smoking cessation programmes for hospitalised patients are highly cost-effective. No significant difference was found in the distribution of ICERs between studies that provide nicotine replacement therapy interventions compared with interventions without nicotine replacement therapy. ICERs for nicotine replacement therapy interventions ranged from dominant to USD 8354 per LY compared with dominant to USD 5568 per LY for interventions without nicotine replacement therapy.
Mahmoudi, 2012 [48]10CEA10 simulation modelsDrummond Critical
Appraisal of Economic Evaluations Checklist
Relapse rate,
ICER
Eight studies used a Markov BENESCO model for analysis, six of these studies found that varenicline dominated bupropion while the remaining two studies identified that varenicline was cost-effective. The 2 non-BENESCO model studies found varenicline to be cost effective with ICERs of USD 14,729 and USD 3303 per LYG.
Reducing alcohol
Kruse, 2020 [49]1CEA1 simulation modelNo tool usedDALYsOnly 1 study investigated the cost-effectiveness of telemedicine for alcohol-related disorders. This study reported that the implementation of new eHealth technologies would improve the value of returns from EUR 1.08 per EUR 1 spent to EUR 1.62 in health-related value.
Fractures
Ganda, 2013 [50]5CEA2 simulation models,
1 quasi,
1 cohort study,
1 clinical audit
No tool usedFracture prevented,
fracture date,
refracture rate,
QALY gained
Four of four studies of interventions involving identification, assessment, and treatment of patients as part of the service were predicted or shown to be cost saving or cost-effective, with a cost of AUD 20,000 to AUD 30,000 per QALY gained. One study identifying and assessing people with a minimal trauma fracture, then making treatment recommendations to the primary care physician, without initiating treatment was found to be cost-effective, reporting cost per QALY gained was GBP 5740.
Wu, 2018 [51]16CBA,
CEA
17 simulation models, 2 cohort matched controlsDrummond Critical
Appraisal of Economic Evaluations Checklist
QALYs,
DALYs,
ICER
Overall, the FLS was shown to be cost-effective compared with usual care or no treatment, regardless of the programme intensity. The least expensive programmes such as mail-based interventions costing CAD 7 to CAD 8 per patient were associated with CAD 18,000 to CAD 22,000 in savings for a population of 1000 post-fracture patients. The upscaled implementation of FLS at 122 sites across the UK was estimated to prevent 31,000 fractures over the lifetimes of patients each year.
ACE, Assessing Cost-Effectiveness; BENESCO, Benefits of Smoking Cessation on Outcomes; CBT, Cognitive behavioural therapy; CCA, Cost–consequence analysis; CEA, Cost-effectiveness analysis; CER, Cost-effectiveness ratio; CHEERS, Consolidated Health Economic Evaluation Reporting Standards; CUA, Cost–utility analysis; DALY, Disability-adjusted life year; DMFS, Decayed, missing, filled surface; FLS, Fracture liaison service; ICER, Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; MET, Metabolic equivalent of task; MOA, Major outcomes averted; National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, NICE; LYG, Life year gained; PID, Pelvic inflammatory disease; QALY, Quality-adjusted life year; RCT, Randomised control trial; ROI, Return on investment; SCBA, Social cost–benefit analysis; SROI, Social return on investment; T2D, Type 2 diabetes.
Table 7. Categorisation of the cost-effectiveness of intervention by health area for the included systematic reviews (n = 26).
Table 7. Categorisation of the cost-effectiveness of intervention by health area for the included systematic reviews (n = 26).
First Author, Publication Year of the Systematic Review
(Number of Articles Included)
CENot CELack of Evid.Not ClearRisk of Methodological Bias Assessment Reported in the Systematic Review
Mental health
Le, 2021 [30]
(n = 65 articles)
XMost (92%) studies were assessed as fair to high methodological quality.
Park, 2013 [31]
(n = 11 articles)
XNot assessed.
Soneson, 2020 [18]
(n = 2 articles)
X All studies were of high methodological quality (met 87–90% of checklist components).
Obesity
Lehnert, 2012 [32]
(n = 16 articles, intervention targeted adults)
X Not assessed.
Lehnert, 2012 [32]
(n = 3 articles, intervention targeted children)
X Not assessed.
Type 2 diabetes
Glechner, 2018 [33]
(n = 14 articles)
X Most studies were of high methodological quality as only 2 checklist components were not met on average across the studies.
Li, 2015 [34]
(n = 22 articles)
X Assessed but results not reported.
Zhou, 2020 [35]
(n = 28 articles)
X Review only included studies with a quality score > 7 points (max. 13 points).
Dental caries
Anopa, 2020 [36]
(n = 16 articles)
XMany (63%) of the studies had a quality appraisal score of ≥94%.
Fraihat, 2019 [37]
(n = 19 articles)
XMany (60%) studies had a quality appraisal score of ≥8 points (max. 10 points).
Public health
Ashton, 2020 [22]
(n = 40 articles)
XMany (71%) studies received the highest quality appraisal rating.
Banke-Thomas, 2015 [38]
(n = 40 articles)
XMany (70%) studies received the highest quality appraisal rating.
Masters, 2017 [21]
(n = 44 articles)
XMany (71%) studies received the highest quality appraisal rating.
Reeves, 2019 [39]
(n = 14 articles)
XNo single study met every reporting criterion and compliance was highly variable for the following quality measures: identification of the effects (29–79% of studies), measurement of effects (50–86%), and valuation of the effects (50–100%).
Chronic disease
Dubas-Jakobczyk, 2017 [40]
(n = 29 articles)
XMost studies (86%) were assessed as “good” or moderate methodological quality.
Gordon, 2007 [41]
(n = 64 articles)
XAssessed but results not reported.
Mattli, 2020 [42]
(n = 12 articles)
X Most studies (83%) met ≥70% methodological quality checklist items.
Pennington, 2013 [43]
(n = 3 articles)
X Only publications assessed as “strong” in methodological quality were included in the review.
Vos, 2011 [29]
(n = 150 articles)
XAssessed but results not reported.
Sexual health
Bloch, 2021 [44]
(n = 31 articles)
XLess than half (32%) of studies met ≥70% of quality checklist items.
Immunisation
Boccalini, 2021 [45]
(n = 8 articles)
X Not assessed.
Smoking cessation
Cheung, 2017 [46]
(n = 2 articles)
X Not assessed.
Lee, 2019 [47]
(n = 9 articles)
X More than half (56%) of studies met >70% of quality checklist items.
Mahmoudi, 2012 [48]
(n = 10 articles)
X Most (80%) studies met ≥90% of quality checklist items.
Reducing alcohol
Kruse, 2020 [49]
(n = 1 article)
X Not assessed.
Fractures
Ganda, 2013 [50]
(n = 5 articles)
X Not assessed.
Wu, 2018 [51]
(n = 16 articles)
X More than half (63%) of studies were assessed as high quality.
X indicates the assessment category that has been assigned to the review based on the strength of the evidence.
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Taylor, R.; Sullivan, D.; Reeves, P.; Kerr, N.; Sawyer, A.; Schwartzkoff, E.; Bailey, A.; Williams, C.; Hure, A. A Scoping Review of Economic Evaluations to Inform the Reorientation of Preventive Health Services in Australia. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 6139. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20126139

AMA Style

Taylor R, Sullivan D, Reeves P, Kerr N, Sawyer A, Schwartzkoff E, Bailey A, Williams C, Hure A. A Scoping Review of Economic Evaluations to Inform the Reorientation of Preventive Health Services in Australia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(12):6139. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20126139

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Taylor, Rachael, Deborah Sullivan, Penny Reeves, Nicola Kerr, Amy Sawyer, Emma Schwartzkoff, Andrew Bailey, Christopher Williams, and Alexis Hure. 2023. "A Scoping Review of Economic Evaluations to Inform the Reorientation of Preventive Health Services in Australia" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 12: 6139. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20126139

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