@article{c0296aa78bf54c0f8a97a9124e280fab,
title = "The cost-effectiveness of clozapine: A controlled, population-based, mirror-image study",
abstract = "A retrospective cohort study, with a mirror-image design, was used to measure inpatient service utilization in 63 consecutive patients started on clozapine from a geographical catchment area compared to a control group matched for previous inpatient service use. An intent-to-treat analysis, including those patients (n = 28) who discontinued clozapine during the study period, showed a significant reduction in number of admissions and total time spent in hospital in the 2 years following clozapine initiation compared to the previous 2 years and to the follow-up period in the control group. This translated into a reduction of £7300 in hospitalization costs per patient started on clozapine, over the 2-year period. In those patients who continued clozapine treatment for the whole of the 2-year period, there was a two-thirds reduction in number of admissions and total time spent in hospital compared to no change in the clozapine discontinuers. These findings suggest that clozapine is a clinically and cost-effective intervention for severe schizophrenia in routine clinical settings.",
keywords = "antipsychotic, clozapine, cost-effectiveness, schizophrenia",
author = "Karen Hayhurst and Petra Brown and Lewis, {S. W.}",
year = "2002",
month = mar,
doi = "10.1177/026988110201600208",
language = "English",
volume = "16",
pages = "169--175",
journal = "Journal of Psychopharmacology",
issn = "1461-7285",
publisher = "Sage Publications Ltd",
number = "2",
}