1 / 30

Knowing what you get for what you pay

Knowing what you get for what you pay . An introduction to cost effectiveness FETP India. Objective this lecture. Understand how cost effectiveness studies are conducted. Key areas. Types of analysis Conducting a cost effectiveness analysis Generalized cost effectiveness .

patricia
Download Presentation

Knowing what you get for what you pay

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Knowing what you get for what you pay An introduction to cost effectiveness FETP India

  2. Objective this lecture Understand how cost effectiveness studies are conducted

  3. Key areas • Types of analysis • Conducting a cost effectiveness analysis • Generalized cost effectiveness

  4. Cost benefit analysis • Concept • Use of dollars as the common metric • No use of health outcome • Results expressed in benefit-cost ratio • Advantages • Allows comparisons with non health programmes • Useful when intervention generates non health outcomes • Disadvantages • Controversial • Assigns a value to human life

  5. Planning Relevance Programming Implementation Adequacy Inputs Process Output Programmed resources----------- Allocatedresources Norms and procedures---------- Applications of norms / procedures Agreed objectives / targets----------------- Achieved objectives / targets Outcome Effectiveness Progress Efficiency Public health managerial processes Impact

  6. Efficiency and effectiveness • Efficiency • Relationship between the output obtained and the efforts (input) invested • Effectiveness • Degree of attainment of pre-determined objectives of a programme (e.g., in terms of reducing death / disability)

  7. Definition of cost effectiveness analysis • Method used to evaluate public health interventions in terms of cost per health outcome • No attempt made to assign a monetary value to disease averted • Outcome used: • Cases • Deaths • Years of life • DALYs

  8. Cost effectiveness analysis: Relevance • Estimates cost per health outcome • Provide additional information to decision makers • Is not the only criteria to take into account to make decisions

  9. Effectiveness • Obtain documented data on effectiveness • Measure effectiveness precisely • Meta analysis • Confidence intervals • Document assumptions The cheapest way to go to the moon is to jump. However, we don’t do it because it does not work

  10. Cost utility analysis • Subset of cost effectiveness analysis • Take YLLs or DALYs as outcome

  11. Discounting • Reflect time preference • Applies to costs • Applies to effects • Subject to discussion

  12. Conducting a cost effectiveness study • Frame the problem • Identify interventions • Define outcome measures • Estimate net costs • Estimate effects • Compile costs and effects • Perform sensitivity analysis

  13. 1. Frame the problem • Write study question • Define economic perspective • Ministry of health • Health system • Societal • Chose time frame for intervention • Absorb start up costs • Chose analytic horizon for consequences

  14. 2. Identify interventions • Take the baseline • “Do nothing” scenario • Define potential interventions • Describe components • Relate to measurable effectiveness

  15. 3. Define outcome measures • Intermediate outcomes • Cases identified, treated • Final outcomes • Cases prevented • Life saved • YLLs • DALYs Cost utility

  16. 4. Estimate costs • Cost of the intervention • ? Cost of the disease averted • Medical costs • Non medical costs • ? Productivity losses Net costs = Cost intervention - Cost disease averted

  17. 5. Estimate effects • Burden of disease • Incidence of disease • Incidence of complications (natural history) • Utility calculations • Effectiveness of intervention • Documented effectiveness estimates • Compliance • Coverage

  18. 6. Compile costs and effects • Calculation of cost effectiveness ratio • Average • Incremental • Can address various options • Coverage • Discounting

  19. 7. Perform sensitivity analysis • Parameters to examine • Costs • ps and qs • Discounting • Effectiveness • Burden of disease • Combinations • Advanced analysis

  20. Key elements of the report of a cost effectiveness study • Study perspective, time frame and horizon • Study question • Assumptions • Description of interventions • Identification of relevant costs • Cost effectiveness ratios • Sensitivity analysis • Discussion

  21. Cost effective and cost saving • Some interventions have negative net costs • Cost saving interventions are: • Uncommon • Subject to distributional effects • Cost effective does not mean cost saving • Human life is not “cost effective” • Investment is needed to sustain it

  22. Cost effectiveness criteria • Not cost effective • Cost per DALY above 3 GDP / capita • Cost effective • Cost per DALY under 3 GDP / capita • Highly cost effective • Cost per DALY under 1 GDP / capita WHO commission on macroeconomics and health

  23. Cost effectiveness versus burden of disease • Cost effective intervention can prevent only a small burden of disease • Some large sources of burden of disease may be preventable through non cost effective interventions

  24. Cost effectiveness of various health interventions

  25. Limitations of traditional cost-effectiveness studies • Different horizons • Different types of costs included • Different costing methods • Different discounting rates • Different outcome measures • Incremental approach • Existing interventions not reconsidered • One dimension • May not address variations by regions • Conflicts of interests

  26. The WHO CHOICE project: Generalized cost-effectiveness • Identical horizons • Standardized approach to including costs • Unique costing methods • Standardized discounting policy • DALY as outcome measures • Null case base • Existing interventions reconsidered • Multiple dimension • Region specific • Science dissociated from advocacy

  27. Generalized cost effectiveness: Challenges • Recent concept • Difficulties in adapting theoretical concepts • Resource intensive • Single study team (at the moment)

  28. Generalized cost effectiveness: Example of results for the SEAR D region

  29. Other criteria to chose an intervention • Feasibility • Ethics • Equity • Sustainability • Acceptability

  30. Take home messages • Chose cost effectiveness analysis • Frame the question right • Follow up progress on the generalized cost effectiveness concept

More Related