From the Editor
Is an ounce of prevention worth a pound of cure? As noted last week, psychiatry tends to emphasize the treatment of illness, not its prevention. But preventing illness is our ultimate goal.
Can we prevent psychotic illness?
Prevention is built on two things: we need to identify at risk individuals, and then we need to use appropriate measures to prevent the illness.
Last week. The psychosis risk calculator.
This week. Cost-effective prevention.
In this week’s Reading, we look at a paper that considers CBT to prevent psychosis in an ultra high-risk group; the paper also considers the cost-effectiveness of the intervention. So is Ben Franklin right in arguing that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure? The paper doesn’t weigh in on Franklin, of course, but it does find that CBT is economically sound with an 83% likelihood of reducing the transition to psychosis and at a lower cost.
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