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Benefits and costs associated with mutual-help community-based recovery homes: The Oxford House model
Authors:Lo Sasso Anthony T  Byro Erik  Jason Leonard A  Ferrari Joseph R  Olson Bradley
Institution:a Health Policy and Administration, School of Public Health, University of Illinois at Chicago, 1603 W Taylor, Chicago, IL 60660, United States
b Economics Department, University of Illinois at Chicago, 601 South Morgan UH725, Chicago, IL 60607, United States
c DePaul University, Center for Community Research, 990 W. Fullerton Ave., Suite 3100, Chicago, IL 60614, United States
d DePaul University, Department of Psychology, 2219 North Kenmore Avenue, Chicago, IL 60614, United States
e National-Louis University, Psychology Department, 122 S. Michigan Ave., Suite 300, Chicago, IL 60603, United States
Abstract:We used data from a randomized controlled study of Oxford House (OH), a self-run, self-supporting recovery home, to conduct a cost-benefit analysis of the program. Following substance abuse treatment, individuals that were assigned to an OH condition (n = 68) were compared to individuals assigned to a usual care condition (n = 61). Economic cost measures were derived from length of stay at an Oxford House residence, and derived from self-reported measures of inpatient and outpatient treatment utilization. Economic benefit measures were derived from self-reported information on monthly income, days participating in illegal activities, binary responses of alcohol and drug use, and incarceration. Results suggest that OH compared quite favorably to usual care: the net benefit of an OH stay was estimated to be roughly $29,000 per person on average. Bootstrapped standard errors suggested that the net benefit was statistically significant. Costs were incrementally higher under OH, but the benefits in terms of reduced illegal activity, incarceration and substance use substantially outweighed the costs. The positive net benefit for Oxford House is primarily driven by a large difference in illegal activity between OH and usual care participants. Using sensitivity analyses, under more conservative assumptions we still arrived at a net benefit favorable to OH of $17,830 per person.
Keywords:Cost-benefit analysis  Substance abuse treatment  Residential treatment
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