Depression and Work Productivity: The Comparative Costs of Treatment Versus Nontreatment
- 1 January 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine
- Vol. 43 (1), 2-9
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00043764-200101000-00002
Abstract
This article discusses the impact of depression on work productivity and the potential for improved work performance associated with effective treatment. We undertook a review of the literature by means of a computer search using the following key terms: cost of illness, work loss, sickness absence, productivity, performance, and disability. Published works were considered in four categories: (1) naturalistic cross-sectional studies that found greater self-reported work impairment among depressed workers; (2) naturalistic longitudinal studies that found a synchrony of change between depression and work impairment; (3) uncontrolled treatment studies that found reduced work impairment with successful treatment; and (4) controlled trials that usually, but not always, found greater reduction in work impairment among treated patients. Observational data suggest that productivity gains following effective depression treatment could far exceed direct treatment costs. Randomized effectiveness trials are needed before we can conclude definitively that depression treatment results in productivity improvements sufficient to offset direct treatment costs.Keywords
This publication has 59 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mental Disorders and Disability Among Patients in a Primary Care Group PracticeAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1997
- The Politics And Economics Of Mental Health ‘Parity’ LawsHealth Affairs, 1997
- The impact of psychiatric disorders on work loss daysPsychological Medicine, 1997
- Social adjustment in dysthymia, double depression and episodic major depressionJournal of Affective Disorders, 1996
- Emotional disability days: prevalence and predictors.American Journal of Public Health, 1994
- Lifetime and 12-Month Prevalence of DSM-III-R Psychiatric Disorders in the United StatesArchives of General Psychiatry, 1994
- Comorbid anxious signs and symptoms in major depressionInternational Clinical Psychopharmacology, 1993
- Depressed Subjects Unwittingly Overreport Poor Social Adjustment Which They Reappraise When RecoveredJournal of Nervous & Mental Disease, 1991
- Occupations and the Prevalence of Major Depressive DisorderJournal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 1990
- The Functioning and Well-being of Depressed PatientsJAMA, 1989