Societal costs of personality disorders: A cross-sectional multicenter study of treatment-seeking patients in mental health services in Norway.
Carl-Aksel SveenG PedersenD A UlvestadK E ZahlT WilbergElfrida Hartveit KvarsteinPublished in: Journal of clinical psychology (2023)
Societal costs were substantial among treatment-seeking patients with the broad range of DSM-5 PDs, comparable to the societal costs of schizophrenia, and significantly higher than the societal costs of both depression and anxiety disorders. The cost estimates converged with recent, register-based cost-of-illness studies of different PDs but exceeded previous findings from other bottom-up studies. Furthermore, the results underscore the importance of implementing effective and specialized treatment for patients with a broad range of PDs, not only to alleviate individual suffering but also to reduce the level of societal costs. The emphasis on productivity loss as a main contributor to the overall societal costs is substantiated, hence underlining the relevance of interventions focusing on improving occupational functioning.