Multi-component interventions for conduct disorder target several contexts of a child?s life (e.g., both home and school environments) and are generally more effective than single-component behavioral interventions. Whether the multi-component approach is cost-effective remains an unanswered question. This article analyzes two decades of data from the Incredible Years (IY) Series to examine the costeffectiveness of delivering multiple, stacked intervention components versus a single-component delivery approach. Cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) provides decision makers with important economic information that can be used to aid in the selection of a program delivery format from one of several competing approaches. CEA concepts, including explicit budget constraints and strict dominance, are demonstrated using IY data; guidelines for interpreting CEA results are provided. Our analyses suggest that combining intervention components is a cost-effective approach to treating behavioral problems in a clinic-based youth population.
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Year: 2007
Bibliography: Olchowski, A., Foster, E. M., & Webster-Stratton, C. 2007. Implementing behavioral intervention components in a cost-effective manner: Analysis of the Incredible Years Program. Journal of Early and Intensive Behavioral Intervention, 4(1), 284-304.
Authors: Olchowski, Foster, Webster-Stratton, ,