Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Assessing the effectiveness of health interventions for cost-effectiveness analysis

1997; Springer Science+Business Media; Volume: 12; Issue: 9 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1046/j.1525-1497.1997.07107.x

ISSN

1525-1497

Autores

Jeanne S. Mandelblatt, Dennis G. Fryback, Milton C. Weinstein, Louise B. Russell, Marthe R. Gold,

Tópico(s)

Healthcare Policy and Management

Resumo

members of the Panel on Cost-Effectiveness in Health and Medicine C ost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) is an analytic tool in which the costs and effects of an intervention designed to prevent, diagnose, or treat disease are calculated and compared with an alternative strategy to achieve the same goals.The results of a CEA are presented as a ratio of costs to effects, where the effects are health outcomes such as cases of disease prevented, years of life gained, or qualityadjusted life years gained, rather than monetary measures, as in cost-benefit analysis.Conducting a CEA requires a framework for portraying the cascade of events that occur as a consequence of the decision to intervene, for describing the probability that each event will occur, for accounting how long each event will last, and describing how much each event costs and is valued by the population or individuals targeted by the intervention.Mathematical models are well suited to these purposes.The purpose of this article is to provide an overview of modeling to estimate net effectiveness in a CEA (the difference in effectiveness between an intervention and the alternative to which it is being compared).Many of the principles described for estimating effectiveness apply equally to determining costs in a CEA.The main difference is that health events are weighted by costs in the numerator of the cost-effectiveness ratio, while they are often weighted by preference values in the denominator.Preference values, or utilities, reflect the fact that individuals or populations with similar ability (or disability) to function may regard that level of functioning differently.When preferences are incorporated into CEAs, the results are generally expressed as costs per quality-adjusted life years. 1,24][5] Following some definitions of terms, this article is organized into two sections describing the process of estimating effectiveness in a CEA: the first presents a review of the sources of event probabilities, and the second describes the use of modeling to estimate effectiveness. DEFINITIONSEffectiveness, which reflects the impact of an intervention of health in real practice settings, should be distin-

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