Investigating Patient Outcome Measures in Mental Health
This report examines the feasibility of incorporating patient outcomes in mental health into a productivity measure. It examines which outcome measures are most commonly used in mental health, the practical issues about collecting these outcome measures, whether they can be converted into a generic measure, whether there is a time series of data available, and whether the data exists to examine changes in the mix of treatments over time. The criteria that were assumed to be important for an outcome measure to be included in a productivity index, were that it should have wide coverage, should be routinely collected, could readily be linked to activity data, could potentially be converted to a generic outcome measure, and would be available as a time-series. The report focuses predominantly on mental health outcomes within the working age population. Literature searches on outcome measurement in mental health covered numerous databases and retrieved over 1500 records. Around 170 full papers were obtained.
Year of publication: |
2009-05
|
---|---|
Authors: | Jacobs, Rowena |
Institutions: | Centre for Health Economics, Department of Economics and Related Studies |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Public services: are composite measures a robust reflection of performance in the public sector?
Jacobs, Rowena, (2006)
-
The effects on waiting times of expanding provider choice:evidence from a policy experiment
Dawson, Diane, (2005)
-
Trends in health care commissioning in the English NHS: an empirical analysis
Dusheiko, Mark, (2006)
- More ...