Capturing the Invisible Wealth in Nonprofits to Overcome Myopic Perceptions
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Role of Drug Addiction-Based Nonprofits and Charities in Providing Social Services and their Contribution to the Economy
- Savings in the healthcare sphere: drug treatment programmes put a stop to the hospital admissions resulting from drug use (primary care visits, medicines, diagnostic tests…), while also entailing a reduction in the demand for drugs from people who benefit from the treatment (in Spain, for example, the hospital cost per person stemming from drug addiction is €399, while primary care visits related to drugs cost an average of €24.24 per visit [29]). This means they have more disposable income to devote to the consumption of other goods that contribute to generating general wealth. Said resources can, in part, be subject to social redistribution through the applicable taxes—something that does not happen with the money spent on illegal drugs, which is retained and hidden by mafias.
- Savings in the employment sphere: abusive and/or habitual drug use is directly associated with greater job insecurity, repeated absences, sick leave, etc. In response to this, the treatment, mostly in the final phases, puts increased emphasis on the processes of social and labour market reintegration for the people undergoing treatment [11]. In addition, treatment programmes for drug dependence, along with other educational and therapeutic activities, encourage training and active job searches.
- Savings in the criminal justice field: given the relationship between drug addiction and crime, every day spent in treatment translates to a reduction in crimes that would have gone to trial and even, on occasion, would have resulted in another prison sentence—at least relative to the rate and duration occurring before treatment. The savings in this area are threefold: fewer trials, fewer custodial sentences and the savings resulting from people staying out of prison as they do not commit any further crimes.
- Savings in intangible costs: the therapeutic support received on being admitted to a specialist organization allows the beneficiaries and their families to initiate processes aimed at breaking the dynamics of pain and suffering in which they are immersed. This provides them with the necessary tools at a personal level (i.e., self-control, self-esteem, etc.) to successfully complete the rehabilitation process and achieve social reintegration. Without these personal achievements, the anticipated savings in the other areas are vulnerable and prevention policies are doomed to fail. Fundamental to the process are health monitoring and professional work, as well as the psychological, socio-educational, sports-based and vocational training therapy carried out by these organizations. Each step forward a person makes in their rehabilitation process translates into improvements in their quality of life, as well as in their personal and family wellbeing, which help prepare them to tackle subsequent stages. These achievements are essential and lie at the heart of these organizations. Therefore, this process of recovery from a deteriorated quality of life, both personal and family, must be made visible qualitatively or quantitatively. From a quantitative point of view, specific measurement instruments have been developed to evaluate drug-dependent persons’ perceived quality of life, see [35]: Qol-DA (Quality of Life Scale for Drug Addicts); IDUQoL (Injection Drug User Quality of Life Scale); TECVASP—Test for Evaluating the Quality of Life in Psychoactive Substance Addicts; HRQOLDA Test (Health-Related Quality of Life for Drug Abusers Test, GENCAT Scale. Additionally, also applicable are the measures of quality of life associated with medical pathologies, such as the Quality-Adjusted Life-Year (QALY), which is widely used in Health Economics.
3. Methodology
3.1. Scope, Approach and Identification of Stakeholders
3.2. Outcomes, Measures and Monetary Conversion Factors
Stakeholders | Outcomes | Type | Measures | Monetary Conversion Factor |
---|---|---|---|---|
Users | Improvements in quality of life | Intangible | General quality of life indicator (QLI). GENCAT Scale [44] | QALY cost [45]; QALY lost [46] |
Family members | Improvements in emotional wellbeing | Intangible | Emotional wellbeing indicator based on ESE. DAU Study [47] | QALY lost [48]; QALY cost [45] |
Improvements in social relationships | Intangible | Social relationships indicator based on ESE. DAU Study [47] | QALY lost; QALY cost [45] | |
Family unit | Increase in disposable income due to not using drugs | Tangible | Surplus due to non-use | Average individual spending per day on drug use [11] |
Volunteers | Professional experience | Tangible | Internship | Cost of ECTS credit |
Public Administration | Cost savings on prison facilities | Tangible | Days spent in prison [11,49] | Average daily cost of one day in prison ([50], p.137). |
4. Results
4.1. Monetized Impacts
4.2. SROI Calculation
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Costs of Drug Dependence Before | Estimated Savings for Society After | |
---|---|---|
Direct Costs | Consequences to health and welfare systems (Direct Costs) Hospitalization Primary Care Emergency Care Number of HIV/AIDS outpatient care | Resulting from drug-use treatment. In the healthcare sphere: Reduction in hospital admissions, primary care Discontinuation of drug use |
Law enforcement and criminal justice costs | In the criminal justice sphere: Fewer trials Fewer prison sentences | |
Other costs (e.g., property destruction, fire loss, fire prevention) | In the public administration sphere: Better resource distribution (fewer resources devoted to repairs and preservation) | |
Indirect Costs | Productivity costs Premature mortality Lost employment or productivity | In the labour market sphere: Less job insecurity Social and labour market reintegration during the final stages of treatment (improvement in labour productivity) Encouraging active job searches |
Intangible Costs | Deterioration of quality of life of both the individual and the family due to the associated physical and emotional suffering | In the personal, family and social sphere: Recovery in terms of mental health and quality of life needed to create improvements in the other spheres |
Stakeholders | Description | Criteria for Inclusion | Criteria for Exclusion |
---|---|---|---|
Users | People admitted to the service to detox. | People directly linked to the service. Main beneficiaries | |
Family Members | Relatives of patients. | Indirect beneficiaries. | Partial deadweight (1) |
Volunteers | People who voluntarily work in the service, preparing and running some of the workshops. | They run workshops. | |
Professionals | People who work in the centre. | They design and carry out activities and workshops. | Deadweight (2) |
Public administration | Prison facilities. | Cost savings.(3) | |
Student interns | People doing an internship in the centre. | They do not affect nor are they affected by the programme itself; they are external to it. They could equally do their compulsory internship in another organization. | |
Workers completing a community service order | People performing tasks as an alternative to being sent to prison. | No interaction with the programme itself. |
Impact | Monetization Method | Quantity(*) | Quality(**) |
---|---|---|---|
Improvement in quality of life (users) | 0.15 QALY per year of treatment Cost per QALY: [€20,291–€25,364] Vallejo et al. (2017) | 40 (1) | QLI increase: from 83.12 to 115.69 (minimum and maximum index values: 52 and 132) |
Improvement in emotional wellbeing (family members) | 0.0425 QALY per year of treatment Cost per QALY: [€20,291–€25,364] Vallejo et al. (2017) | 40 | Average increase in the emotional wellbeing indicator from 0.257 to 0.4 (out of a maximum of 1) |
Improvement in social relationships (family members) | 0.04625 QALY per year of treatment Cost per QALY: [€20,291–€25,364] Vallejo et al. (2017) | 40 | Average increase in the social relationships indicator from 0.529 to 0.714 (out of a maximum of 1) |
Increase in disposable income (family unit) | Average individual daily expenditure on drug use: €22.64 [11] Marginal propensity to consume 2014: 0.64 [66] | 40 | Increase in disposable income for one year by freeing up amount spent on drug use. |
Professional experience (volunteers) | Cost of an internship credit in an official master’s degree in the subject area: €46.20 (official rates) | 4 (2) | Gain professional experience by directly working with patients, equivalent to 6 ECTS credits (3) |
Cost savings on prison facilities (4) | Average daily cost of prison facilities: €65.78 [50] | 17 (5) | Estimated number of days spent in prison: 96 (6) |
Stakeholders | Impact | Tangible | Intangible | Total | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Minimum | Maximum | Minimum | Maximum | |||
Users | Improvement in quality of life | 121,748.46 | 152,185.56 | 121,748.46 | 152,185.56 | |
Family members | Improvement in emotional wellbeing | 34,495.40 | 43,119.24 | 34,495.40 | 43,119.24 | |
Family members | Improvement in social relationships | 37,539.11 | 46,923.88 | 37,539.11 | 46,923.88 | |
Family unit | Increase in disposable income due to not using drugs | 250,979.84 | 250,979.84 | 250,979.84 | ||
Volunteers | Professional experience | 1,108.80 | 1,108.80 | 1,108.80 | 1,108.80 | |
Public Administration | Cost savings on prison facilities | 107,352.96 | 107,352.96 | 107,352.96 | ||
358,332.80 | 194,891.77 | 243,337.48 | 553,224.57 | 601,670.28 |
Tangible | Intangible | SROI | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Minimum | Maximum | Minimum | Maximum | |||||||
Impacts | 358,332.80 | 1.88 | 194,891.77 | 1.02 | 243,337.48 | 1.28 | 553,224.57 | 2.9 | 601,670.28 | 3.15 |
Inputs | 190,838.10 | 190,838.10 | 190,838.10 | 190,838.10 | 190,838.10 |
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Fuertes-Fuertes, I.; Cabedo, J.D.; Jimeno-García, I. Capturing the Invisible Wealth in Nonprofits to Overcome Myopic Perceptions. Sustainability 2020, 12, 48. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12010048
Fuertes-Fuertes I, Cabedo JD, Jimeno-García I. Capturing the Invisible Wealth in Nonprofits to Overcome Myopic Perceptions. Sustainability. 2020; 12(1):48. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12010048
Chicago/Turabian StyleFuertes-Fuertes, Iluminada, J. David Cabedo, and Inmaculada Jimeno-García. 2020. "Capturing the Invisible Wealth in Nonprofits to Overcome Myopic Perceptions" Sustainability 12, no. 1: 48. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12010048
APA StyleFuertes-Fuertes, I., Cabedo, J. D., & Jimeno-García, I. (2020). Capturing the Invisible Wealth in Nonprofits to Overcome Myopic Perceptions. Sustainability, 12(1), 48. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12010048