Treatment costs of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in Germany

authored by
Sebastian Braun, Jan Zeidler, Roland Linder, Susanne Engel, Frank Verheyen, Wolfgang Greiner
Abstract

Background: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is one of the most common behavioural disorders among children and adolescents. The number of patients as well as prescriptions to treat this disease has continuously increased over the past few years. The aim of the present study was to analyse the costs for treating ADHD patients from the perspective of a major German health insurance fund. Methodology: Anonymised administrative claims data were available for the study. All services reimbursed by the health fund for the selected ADHD patients were recorded. Apart from the resource use attributed directly to ADHD, co-morbidities as well as incremental costs were described based on a control group design. Results: A total of 30,264 ADHD patients were diagnosed in 2008. The total costs for these patients were €3,888, and the incremental costs were €2,902. The largest proportions of incremental costs were due to therapeutic devices and remedies like occupational therapy amounting to €1,270. Proportionate costs of €263 have been settled for pharmacotherapy with Methylphenidate and Atomoxetine. However, 41 % of the patients were not treated with ADHD-related pharmaceuticals. Conclusions: ADHD costs are relevant from health insurance perspective. The expenses for occupational therapy constitute the cost driver. Compared to the findings of studies from the United States and contrarily to the backdrop of public discussions about considerably increased prescriptions of ADHD-specific drugs, the significantly higher additional expenses for occupational therapy services are impressing. This kind of therapy is internationally rather unknown and is therefore not acknowledged as a therapeutic standard.

Organisation(s)
Center for Health Economics Research Hannover (CHERH)
External Organisation(s)
Xcenda GmbH
Bielefeld University
The TK Scientific Institute of Value and Efficiency in Healthcare (WINEG)
Type
Article
Journal
European Journal of Health Economics
Volume
14
Pages
939-945
No. of pages
7
ISSN
1618-7598
Publication date
12.2013
Publication status
Published
Peer reviewed
Yes
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous), Health Policy
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
Electronic version(s)
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10198-012-0440-5 (Access: Closed)
http://10.1007/s10198-016-0771-8 (Access: Open)