Objective: Previous studies have established a connection between therapy and healthcare cost: an increase in cost prior to therapy and a maintained decrease post therapy. There is, however, a lack of studies examining the combined effects of psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy on healthcare cost.
Method: Healthcare cost was examined quarterly in 1,213 patients (28,776 observations) in a naturalistic longitudinal design. Psychotherapy only was compared to combined treatment and to an addition of psychotherapy to preexisting pharmacotherapy. The comparisons were conducted with a multilevel piecewise model (LMLM) computed for three phases: pre-, during-, and post-therapy.
Results: Significant interactions were found between the contrast comparing preexisting pharmacotherapy to the during-psychotherapy and no-pharmacotherapy groups and the three piecewise variables. The pre-therapy increase was larger for the preexisting-pharmacotherapy group than for the other groups. The during-therapy decrease was larger for the preexisting-pharmacotherapy group than for the other groups. In the post-therapy period, the increase was significant only for the prior-psychiatric-medication group.
Conclusions: Preexisting psychotropic treatment along with an increase in healthcare expenditure may serve as an indication of the need for additional psychotherapy treatment.
Keywords: combined treatment; economic benefits; healthcare utilization; psychiatric medication; psychodynamic psychotherapy.