Abstract

BackgroundToo many young people engage in unhealthy behaviours such as eating unhealthily, being physically inactive, binge drinking and smoking. This study aimed to estimate the short-term and long-term cost-effectiveness of a theory-based online health behaviour intervention (“U@Uni”) in comparison with control in young people starting university.MethodsA costing analysis was conducted to estimate the full cost of U@Uni and the cost of U@Uni roll-out. The short-term cost-effectiveness of U@Uni was estimated using statistical analysis of 6-month cost and health-related quality of life data from the U@Uni randomised controlled trial. An economic modelling analysis combined evidence from the trial with published evidence of the effect of health behaviours on mortality risk and general population data on health behaviours, to estimate the lifetime cost-effectiveness of U@Uni in terms of incremental cost per QALY. Costs and effects were discounted at 1.5% per annum. A full probabilistic sensitivity analysis was conducted to account for uncertainty in model inputs and provide an estimate of the value of information for groups of important parameters.ResultsTo implement U@Uni for the randomised controlled trial was estimated to cost £292 per participant, whereas roll-out to another university was estimated to cost £19.71, both giving a QALY gain of 0.0128 per participant. The short-term (6-month) analysis suggested that U@Uni would not be cost-effective at a willingness-to-pay threshold of £20,000 per QALY (incremental cost per QALY gained = £243,926). When a lifetime horizon was adopted the results suggest that the full implementation of U@Uni is unlikely to be cost-effective, whereas the roll-out of U@Uni to another university is extremely likely to be cost-effective. The value of information analysis suggests that the most important drivers of decision uncertainty are uncertainties in the effect of U@Uni on health behaviours.ConclusionsThe study provides the first estimate of the costs and cost-effectiveness of an online health behaviour intervention targeted at new university students. The results suggest that the roll-out, but not the full implementation, of U@Uni would be a cost-effective decision for the UK Department of Health, given a lifetime perspective and a willingness-to pay threshold of £20,000 per QALY.Trial registrationCurrent Controlled Trials ISRCTN67684181.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1471-2458-14-1011) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Too many young people engage in unhealthy behaviours such as eating unhealthily, being physically inactive, binge drinking and smoking

  • The economic evaluation was conducted in three parts: (i) a costing analysis to estimate the cost of U@Uni, (ii) a within-trial statistical analysis to estimate the short-term cost-effectiveness of U@Uni using EQ-5D data [10] collected within the 6-month randomized controlled trial (RCT) follow-up period, and (iii) an economic modelling analysis to estimate the long-term cost-effectiveness of U@Uni

  • This study provides the first estimate of the full implementation (£208,500) and roll-out (£29,988) costs of an online intervention targeting multiple health behaviours in new university students

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Summary

Introduction

Too many young people engage in unhealthy behaviours such as eating unhealthily, being physically inactive, binge drinking and smoking. Evidence from the 2008 Health Survey for England [1] suggested that only 20% of young people (aged 16–24) eat five portions of fruit and vegetables per day, less than 50% meet weekly physical activity guidelines, 25% smoke, and 40% exceed daily recommended alcohol limits. These health behaviours amongst young people have an effect on health in terms of risk of illness and disease, mortality risk, and quality of life [2]. Full details of the U@Uni intervention and the RCT have been published elsewhere [3,7]

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