Abstract

Many suggested policy interventions for childhood and adolescent obesity have costs and effects that fall outside the health care sector. These cross-sectorial costs and consequences have implications for how economic evaluation is applied and although previous systematic reviews have provided a summary of cost-effectiveness, very few have conducted a review of methods applied. We undertook this comprehensive review of economic evaluations, appraising the methods used, assessing the quality of the economic evaluations, and summarising cost-effectiveness. Nine electronic databases were searched for full-economic evaluation studies published between January 2001 and April 2017 with no language or country restrictions. 39 economic evaluation studies were reviewed and quality assessed. Almost all the studies were from Western countries and methods were found to vary by country, setting and type of intervention. The majority, particularly “behavioural and policy” preventive interventions, were cost-effective, even cost-saving. Only four interventions were not cost effective. This systematic review suggests that economic evaluation of obesity interventions is an expanding area of research. However, methodological heterogeneity makes evidence synthesis challenging. Whilst upstream interventions show promise, an expanded and consistent approach to evaluate cost-effectiveness is needed to capture health and non-health costs and consequences.

Highlights

  • Childhood obesity is a major global public health problem with associated health, social, and emotional consequences, as well as long term direct and indirect costs [1,2,3,4]

  • Economic evaluation is a means to aid decisions about public resource allocation [9,10] and as obesity prevention and treatment often involves lifestyle interventions that have costs and consequences that fall outside the health care sector, a societal perspective for evaluation is usually recommended [10]

  • This paper reports on a systematic review of published economic evaluations of obesity prevention and/or treatment interventions in children and adolescents (0–19 years) with the primary objective of appraising the methods used and assessing the quality of the economic evaluations using the Drummond checklist [19]

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Summary

Introduction

Childhood obesity is a major global public health problem with associated health, social, and emotional consequences, as well as long term direct and indirect costs [1,2,3,4]. Economic evaluation is a means to aid decisions about public resource allocation [9,10] and as obesity prevention and treatment often involves lifestyle interventions that have costs and consequences that fall outside the health care sector, a societal perspective for evaluation is usually recommended [10]. This means that all relevant resource use/costs and consequences are measured, outlining how these fit within a given sector, such as health, education, or the wider community [11]. Public Health 2019, 16, 485; doi:10.3390/ijerph16030485 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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