Journal of Medical Internet Research (Oct 2024)

A Universal Digital Stress Management Intervention for Employees: Randomized Controlled Trial with Health-Economic Evaluation

  • Johanna Freund,
  • Filip Smit,
  • Dirk Lehr,
  • Anna-Carlotta Zarski,
  • Matthias Berking,
  • Heleen Riper,
  • Burkhardt Funk,
  • David Daniel Ebert,
  • Claudia Buntrock

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/48481
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26
p. e48481

Abstract

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BackgroundStress is highly prevalent and known to be a risk factor for a wide range of physical and mental disorders. The effectiveness of digital stress management interventions has been confirmed; however, research on its economic merits is still limited. ObjectiveThis study aims to assess the cost-effectiveness, cost-utility, and cost-benefit of a universal digital stress management intervention for employees compared with a waitlist control condition within a time horizon of 6 months. MethodsRecruitment was directed at the German working population. A sample of 396 employees was randomly assigned to the intervention group (n=198) or the waitlist control condition (WLC) group (n=198). The digital stress management intervention included 7 sessions plus 1 booster session, which was offered without therapeutic guidance. Health service use, patient and family expenditures, and productivity losses were self-assessed and used for costing from a societal and an employer’s perspective. Costs were related to symptom-free status (PSS-10 [Perceived Stress Scale] score 2 SDs below the study population baseline mean) and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) gained. The sampling error was handled using nonparametric bootstrapping. ResultsFrom a societal perspective, the digital intervention was likely to be dominant compared with WLC, with a 56% probability of being cost-effective at a willingness-to-pay (WTP) of €0 per symptom-free person gained. At the same WTP threshold, the digital intervention had a probability of 55% being cost-effective per QALY gained relative to the WLC. This probability increased to 80% at a societal WTP of €20,000 per QALY gained. Taking the employer’s perspective, the digital intervention showed a probability of a positive return on investment of 78%. ConclusionsDigital preventive stress management for employees appears to be cost-effective societally and provides a favorable return on investment for employers. Trial RegistrationGerman Clinical Trials Register DRKS00005699; https://drks.de/search/en/trial/DRKS00005699