Health Economics & Policy 3 rd Edition James W. Henderson Chapter 4 Economic Evaluation in Health Care.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
ECONOMIC EVALUATION WHY DO YOU NEED TO BOTHER? JUDITH BOSMANS.
Advertisements

1 Are you sure your improvements are cost-effective? Edward Broughton, PhD, MPH, PT University Research Co. April 11, 2014
Introduction to Pharmacoeconomics
Overview of the day Introduction to Health Economics Introduction to Economic Evaluations LUNCH Appraising Economic.
Decision Analysis. What is decision analysis? Based on expected utility theory Based on expected utility theory Used in conditions of uncertainty Used.
Engineering Systems Analysis Richard de Neufville © Massachusetts Institute of Technology Economic Evaluation Slide 1 of 22 Economic Evaluation l Objective.
The role of economic modelling – a brief introduction Francis Ruiz NICE International © NICE 2014.
Introduction to decision modelling Andrew Sutton.
Utility Assessment HINF Medical Methodologies Session 4.
A METHODOLOGY FOR MEASURING THE COST- UTILITY OF EARLY CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENTAL INTERVENTIONS Quality of improved life opportunities (QILO)
Economic evaluation considers assessment of intervention effects in economic terms, which is often of greatest interest to fund allocators Intervention.
Journal Club Alcohol and Health: Current Evidence March-April 2006.
COST–EFFECTIVENESS ANALYSIS AND COST-UTILITY ANALYSIS
Valuation issues Jan Sørensen, Health Economist CAST – Centre for Applied Health Services Research and Technology Assessment University of Southern Denmark.
Chapter 11: Cost-Benefit Analysis Econ 330: Public Finance Dr
AGEC 608 Lecture 17, p. 1 AGEC 608: Lecture 17 Objective: Review the main aspects of cost- effectiveness analysis (CEA) and cost-utility analysis (CUA).
Cost-Effectiveness & Resource Allocation Wisconsin Public Health and Health Policy Institute May 26, 2005.
Engineering Systems Analysis Richard de Neufville © Massachusetts Institute of Technology Economic Evaluation Slide 1 of 22 Economic Evaluation l Objective.
Chapter 3 Cost and Benefit Analysis (c) 2010 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except.
Drug and Therapeutics Committee
Chapter 4: Economic Efficiency and Cost Benefit Analysis 1.Economic Efficiency 2.Cost Benefit Analysis.
Do we need economics in medicine?. Edmund Burke, 1790 dcist.com/2007/12/10/revisiting_edmu.php “…the age of chivalry is gone. That of sophisters, economists,
Economics 330 Economics of Health Care
Measuring and valuing health outcome Montarat Thavorncharoensap, Ph.D. 1: Faculty of Pharmacy, Mahidol University 2. HITAP, Thailand.
Economic Evaluations, Briefly… CHSC 433 Module 6/Chapter 13 UIC School of Public Health L. Michele Issel, PhD, R N.
1 Cost-effectiveness of improving medical services in low-resource settings Edward Broughton, PhD, MPH, PT University Research Co. May 21, 2014
Cost-Effectiveness Problem l You have a $1.5 billion budget to spend on any combination of these programs:
Taxes on the Longevity Dividend: Can we Reduce Them? Lessons from the Theoretical Foundations of Medical Cost-Effectiveness Analysis David Meltzer MD,
PHAR 310: Pharmacoeconomics
Knowing what you get for what you pay An introduction to cost effectiveness FETP India.
What Are You Worth? Demonstrating the Value of Your Program to Your Community and Potential Investors Ethan Joselow, MPH.
Measuring Health Outcomes
Cost and Cost-Effectiveness Analysis.  Public and private resources limited. Decision- makers make choices about resource allocation; it is only a question.
Normative Criteria for Decision Making Applying the Concepts
Cost-Effectiveness Thresholds Professor of Health Economics
Economic evaluation Definition - the comparative analysis of alternative courses of action in terms of both their cost and consequences.
Health Economics Unit Definition of Economics  Demand − relationship between quantities and prices that addresses how much bought at each price.
317_L26, Mar J. Schaafsma 1 Review of the Last Lecture Are looking at program evaluation in healthcare Three methods: CBA, CEA, CUA discussed CBA,
Outcomes in Decision Analysis: Utilities, QALYs & DALYs, and Discounting DCEA 24 January 2013 James G. Kahn.
Phaedra Corso, Ph.D. Associate Professor College of Public Health University of Georgia Program Evaluation from an Economic Perspective.
Mohammad Aljawadi PharmD, PhD Clinical Pharmacy Department King Saud University PHCL 431 Sep, 2015.
Cost-Effectiveness and Cost-Benefit Analysis N287E Spring 2006 Joanne Spetz 31 May 2006.
انواع ارزيابي های اقتصادي سيدرضا مجدزاده مرکز تحقيقات بهره برداری از دانش سلامت و دانشکده بهداشت دانشگاه علوم پزشکي و خدمات بهداشتي درماني تهران.
Why to study Pharmacoeconomics? Expansion of medical knowledge Increase in the treatment options Burden on the health care professionals to provide effective.
Economic evaluation of psychotherapy for personality disorders: burden of disease and cost-effectiveness Djøra Soeteman Viersprong Institute for Studies.
Make Nutrition Services Count: Cost-Effectiveness Research & Outcomes Research.
P.A. Vorobyev RSPOR president Economy of Equity and Clinico-economic Analysis of Drug Supply in Russian Federation.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 3 Valuing the Environment: Methods.
The Use of Pharmacoeconomics and Pharmacoepidemiology in Your Local MTF P&T Process by Marv Shepherd, Ph.D. Jim Wilson, Ph.D. Center for Pharmacoeconomic.
The financial costs and benefits of alcohol The financial costs and benefits of alcohol Christine Godfrey Department of Health Sciences & Centre for Health.
Flagship Program on Health Sector Reform and Sustainable Financing.
Capital Insight Pty Limited ABN Berry Street North Sydney NSW 2060 t f Health Economics.
1 Chapter 4 Prof. Dr. Mohamed I. Migdad Professor in Economics 2015.
Cost-Effectiveness and Outcomes Research Setting value to what we do.
Who is involved in making NICE guidance recommendations and what evidence do they look at? Jane Cowl, Senior Public Involvement Adviser Tommy Wilkinson,
Presentation Developed for the Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy
Economic evaluation of health programmes Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health Class no. 7: Cost-effectiveness analysis – Part.
Economic Analysis in the Public Sector Benefit/Cost Analysis.
Chapter 14 Economic Analysis of Clinical and Managerial Interventions Copyright 2015 Health Administration Press.
How To Incorporate Measuring Costs into Research Design
Cost effectiveness Analysis: Valuing Health; Valuing Research!
HEALTH ECONOMICS BASICS
Preference Assessment 1 Measuring Utilities Directly
Economic Evaluation of Health Interventions Basic Concepts
NAPLEX preparation: Biostatistics
Economic Evaluation Objective of Analysis Criteria Nature
Pharmacoeconomic Dr . Dlivan F. Aziz.
Presentation Developed for the Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy
Presentation transcript:

Health Economics & Policy 3 rd Edition James W. Henderson Chapter 4 Economic Evaluation in Health Care

The Inevitability of Trade-Offs l The value of a medical intervention l The inclusion of a drug on the formulary l Paying for an experimental procedure l Investing in new technology l Is it worth it? How do we measure value to insure we get value for spending?

Economic Evaluation l Reality of opportunity cost l Useful alternatives compete for resources l Making choices is sometime unpleasant l Options for colorectal cancer screening –Fecal blood test –Barium enima –Sigmoidoscopy –Colonoscopy l Is it worth the extra money?

What is Economic Evaluation? l A comparative analysis l Evaluating alternative courses of action l Examining both costs and consequences –Identify –Value –Measure –Compare

Types of Economic Evaluation l Cost of illness studies l Cost-benefit analyses l Cost-effectiveness studies

Cost of Illness Studies l What does it cost? l Burden of a disease l Burden of 5 chronic conditions in US (Druss et al., 2001) –Mood disorders, diabetes, heart disease, asthma, and hypertension –Direct cost of treatment - $62.3 billion] –Cost of treating coexisting conditions - $270 billion –Lost productivity - $36.2 billion l Role in analysis – increased awareness

Cost-Benefit Analysis l Simple extension of capital budgeting l Developed to help public sector make decisions that maximize public welfare from tax spending l Optimization in the absence of market pressure

Benefit-Cost Criterion l If ratio is greater than one, project is acceptable l If net benefit stream is positive, project is acceptable.

Challenges of Cost-Benefit Analysis Challenges of Cost-Benefit Analysis l Valuing benefits –How do you place a value on a human life? –Willingness-to-pay approach l When applied to health depends on –wealth –life expectancy –current health status –possibility of substituting current consumption for future consumption l Choosing a discount rate

Cost-Effectiveness Analysis l Developed outside traditional welfare economics framework l Measures health benefit by health outcome, not the dollar value of life l Using the decision makers approach –Maximize the level of health for a given population subject to a budget constraint –Practical guide for choosing between programs or treatment options when budgets are limited

Incremental Cost-Effectiveness Ratio l If C A > C B and E A C B and E A < E B, B dominates. l If C A E B, A dominates. l If, however, C B > C A and E B > E A, choice is not obvious. Use CE.

Graphical Presentation of CE

Interpretation of CE Graph l Strategies that form the solid line connecting the points lying left and above are the economically rational subset of choices l Points like C and E are strictly dominated alternatives l The inverse of the slope between any two points represents the incremental CE ratio l As the slope gets flatter, the CE ratio gets higher – giving literal meaning to “flat-of-the-curve”

Measuring Costs l Direct – associated with use of resources –Medical –Non-medical l Indirect – related to lost productivity –Medical –Non-medical l Intangible – associated with pain and suffering, grief, anxiety, and disfigurement

Measuring Effectiveness – Improvements in Health l Surrogate measures stated in terms of clinical efficacy –Blood pressure, cholesterol levels, bone mass density, or tumor size l Intermediate measures stated in terms of clinical effectiveness –Events, scores on exams l Final outcomes measure economic effectiveness –Events avoided, disease-free days, life-years saved, quality-adjusted life years saved

Improved Life Expectancy Due to Clinical Treatment

Quality of Life Measures l Attempt to measure value of life in terms of quality and quantity l View QALY as life expectancy with a preference weight for perfect health attached to each year l Measured on a preference scale anchored by death (0) and perfect health (1)

Calculating QALYs Using Preferences for Health States

Standard Time Trade-Off for Calculating QALYs l Standard time tradeoff offering 2 options: –chronic health state i for t years, followed immediately by death –Perfect health for x years (where x is less than t), followed immediately by death l Vary length of x until individual is indifferent between two options l Value of one year in chronic health state is x/t

Standard Gamble for Calculating QALYs l Direct approach based on fundamental axioms of utility theory –A treatment is available for individuals in chronic disease state –When it works, the treatment provides a permanent cure. When it does not work, the result is immediate death –How high does the risk of dying have to be before the patient refuses treatment? –The utility value of each year in the chronic disease state is equal to the associated probability that the treatment works

Performing an ICER l Rank the alternative treatment options by health benefit (beginning with the one with the lowest benefit). l Eliminate treatment alternatives that are strictly dominated. l Calculate the ICER between each treatment option and the next most expensive option. l Eliminate treatment options that display extended dominance. l Determine which treatment options have an ICER that is below the cut-off ICER.