
Family Matters
Public Health & Prevention: Home- or Family-basedBenefit-cost methods last updated December 2024. Literature review updated June 2016.
ALL |
META-ANALYSIS |
CITATIONS |
|
| Benefit-Cost Summary Statistics Per Participant | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Benefits to: | ||||||
| Taxpayers | $693 | Benefits minus costs | $1,962 | |||
| Participants | $1,293 | Benefit to cost ratio | $9.17 | |||
| Others | $210 | Chance the program will produce | ||||
| Indirect | $5 | benefits greater than the costs | 73% | |||
| Total benefits | $2,202 | |||||
| Net program cost | ($240) | |||||
| Benefits minus cost | $1,962 | |||||
| Meta-Analysis of Program Effects | ||||||||||||
| Outcomes measured | Treatment age | No. of effect sizes | Treatment N | Effect sizes (ES) and standard errors (SE) used in the benefit-cost analysis | Unadjusted effect size (random effects model) | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First time ES is estimated | Second time ES is estimated | |||||||||||
| ES | SE | Age | ES | SE | Age | ES | p-value | |||||
Alcohol use before end of high school Any use of alcohol by the end of high school, typically between ages 14 and 18. |
14 | 1 | 531 | -0.058 | 0.079 | 15 | -0.058 | 0.079 | 18 | -0.177 | 0.040 | |
Smoking before end of high school Any smoking of tobacco by the end of high school, typically between ages 14 and 18. |
14 | 1 | 531 | -0.061 | 0.079 | 15 | -0.061 | 0.079 | 18 | -0.186 | 0.028 | |
| Detailed Monetary Benefit Estimates Per Participant | ||||||
| Affected outcome: | Resulting benefits:1 | Benefits accrue to: | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Taxpayers | Participants | Others2 | Indirect3 | Total |
||
| Alcohol use before end of high school | Criminal justice system | $29 | $0 | $72 | $15 | $116 |
| Labor market earnings associated with alcohol abuse or dependence | $531 | $1,252 | $0 | $0 | $1,783 | |
| Property loss associated with alcohol abuse or dependence | $0 | $2 | $3 | $0 | $4 | |
| Smoking before end of high school | Health care associated with smoking | $131 | $37 | $135 | $66 | $370 |
| Mortality associated with smoking | $1 | $3 | $0 | $45 | $49 | |
| Program cost | Adjustment for deadweight cost of program | $0 | $0 | $0 | ($120) | ($120) |
| Totals | $693 | $1,293 | $210 | $5 | $2,202 | |
| Detailed Annual Cost Estimates Per Participant | ||||
| Annual cost | Year dollars | Summary | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Program costs | $140 | 1997 | Present value of net program costs (in 2023 dollars) | ($240) |
| Comparison costs | $0 | 1997 | Cost range (+ or -) | 10% |
Benefits Minus Costs |
Benefits by Perspective |
Taxpayer Benefits by Source of Value |
| Benefits Minus Costs Over Time (Cumulative Discounted Dollars) |
| The graph above illustrates the estimated cumulative net benefits per-participant for the first fifty years beyond the initial investment in the program. We present these cash flows in discounted dollars. If the dollars are negative (bars below $0 line), the cumulative benefits do not outweigh the cost of the program up to that point in time. The program breaks even when the dollars reach $0. At this point, the total benefits to participants, taxpayers, and others, are equal to the cost of the program. If the dollars are above $0, the benefits of the program exceed the initial investment. |
Citations Used in the Meta-Analysis
Bauman, K.E., Ennett, S.T., Foshee, V.A., Pemberton, M., King, T.S., & Koch, G.G. (2002). Influence of a family program on adolescent smoking and drinking prevalence. Prevention Science, 3(1), 35-42.