TY - JOUR
T1 - Patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder vs depression have comparable health care costs
T2 - A retrospective claims analysis of Florida Medicaid enrollees
AU - Hankin, Cheryl S.
AU - Koran, Lorrin
AU - Sheehan, David V.
AU - Hollander, Eric
AU - Culpepper, Larry
AU - Black, Donald W.
AU - Knispel, John
AU - Dunn, Jeffrey
AU - Dougherty, Darin D.
AU - Bronstone, Amy
AU - Wang, Zhaohui
PY - 2011/11/1
Y1 - 2011/11/1
N2 - BACKGROUND: The health care burden of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is relatively unknown.OBJECTIVE: To compare the health care burden of patients with OCD vs depression.METHODS: This retrospective claims analysis compared the 2-year median per-patient health care claims and costs for Florida Medicaid adult enrollees (1997 to 2006) newly diagnosed with "pure OCD" (P-OCD; OCD without comorbid major depression, bipolar disorder, psychosis, organic mental disorder, pervasive developmental disorder, nonpsychotic brain damage, developmental delay, or mental retardation) with matched patients newly diagnosed with "pure depression" (P-D; similar to P-OCD but excluding OCD instead of depression). RESULTS: Eighty-five newly diagnosed P-OCD patients were matched with 14,906 P-D patients. Although median per-patient total health care costs were comparable across groups, patients with P-D incurred significantly higher median outpatient medical costs ($1,928 vs $363, P = .003), while those with P-OCD incurred almost three-fold greater psychiatric costs ($2,028 vs $759, P < .0001). The latter was due primarily to significantly higher costs of psychotropic medications among those with P-OCD ($4,307 vs $2,317, P = .0006) rather than to psychiatric outpatient care. CONCLUSIONS: Patients with P-D and P-OCD carry a similar burden in overall health care costs. However, the burden of those with P-D was largely attributable to outpatient medical costs while that of those with P-OCD was due to higher costs of psychotropic medications.
AB - BACKGROUND: The health care burden of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is relatively unknown.OBJECTIVE: To compare the health care burden of patients with OCD vs depression.METHODS: This retrospective claims analysis compared the 2-year median per-patient health care claims and costs for Florida Medicaid adult enrollees (1997 to 2006) newly diagnosed with "pure OCD" (P-OCD; OCD without comorbid major depression, bipolar disorder, psychosis, organic mental disorder, pervasive developmental disorder, nonpsychotic brain damage, developmental delay, or mental retardation) with matched patients newly diagnosed with "pure depression" (P-D; similar to P-OCD but excluding OCD instead of depression). RESULTS: Eighty-five newly diagnosed P-OCD patients were matched with 14,906 P-D patients. Although median per-patient total health care costs were comparable across groups, patients with P-D incurred significantly higher median outpatient medical costs ($1,928 vs $363, P = .003), while those with P-OCD incurred almost three-fold greater psychiatric costs ($2,028 vs $759, P < .0001). The latter was due primarily to significantly higher costs of psychotropic medications among those with P-OCD ($4,307 vs $2,317, P = .0006) rather than to psychiatric outpatient care. CONCLUSIONS: Patients with P-D and P-OCD carry a similar burden in overall health care costs. However, the burden of those with P-D was largely attributable to outpatient medical costs while that of those with P-OCD was due to higher costs of psychotropic medications.
KW - Health care resources
KW - Major depression
KW - Obsessive-compulsive disorder
KW - Retrospective claims analysis
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M3 - Article
C2 - 22073386
AN - SCOPUS:84858314853
SN - 1040-1237
VL - 23
SP - 285
EP - 296
JO - Annals of Clinical Psychiatry
JF - Annals of Clinical Psychiatry
IS - 4
ER -