ABSTRACTThis article examines the methodological implications of the societal perspective in cost-effectiveness analyses in which the costs of health-care interventions are defined as the sums of direct and indirect costs. In the model of cost-effectiveness analysis in which the planner distributes patients among many treatments for many illnesses, the definition requires that total indirect costs be constrained, and the article proposes an iterative computational procedure for choosing a constraint under the assumption that the planner maintains a target trade-off rate between losses of health benefits and reductions in indirect costs. In the more common model in which the planner decides which of two treatments for one illness to provide ...
Introduction: As health-care payers are faced with the need to allocate finite resources to maximiz...
Abstract When performing health economic evaluations all costs and expected benefits (in terms of c...
Despite the growing literature on economic evaluation of health care programmes, little attention ha...
In a recent issue of PharmacoEconomics, Liljas discusses how to incorporate indirect costs into a co...
Recent work has clarified the welfare implications of the application of cost-effectiveness analysis...
The primary market-based approach to reining in health care costs is generally referred to in policy...
textabstractResults of cost effectiveness analyses (CEA) studies are most useful for decision makers...
Promoted as a way to make medical decisions more rational as pressure mounts to control costs and im...
Cost-effectiveness analysis can be used to help set priorities for funding health care programs. For...
Contains fulltext : 49211.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)BACKGROUND: Pr...
In decision making regarding optimal resource allocation to safeguard public health, policymakers an...
In many health decision making situations there is a requirement that the effectiveness of intervent...
In decision making regarding optimal resource allocation to safeguard public health, policymakers an...
Health economics is an evolving field. This article considers operationalising the complexities of i...
AbstractTolerability is an essential part of drug therapy and can affect health and economic outcome...
Introduction: As health-care payers are faced with the need to allocate finite resources to maximiz...
Abstract When performing health economic evaluations all costs and expected benefits (in terms of c...
Despite the growing literature on economic evaluation of health care programmes, little attention ha...
In a recent issue of PharmacoEconomics, Liljas discusses how to incorporate indirect costs into a co...
Recent work has clarified the welfare implications of the application of cost-effectiveness analysis...
The primary market-based approach to reining in health care costs is generally referred to in policy...
textabstractResults of cost effectiveness analyses (CEA) studies are most useful for decision makers...
Promoted as a way to make medical decisions more rational as pressure mounts to control costs and im...
Cost-effectiveness analysis can be used to help set priorities for funding health care programs. For...
Contains fulltext : 49211.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)BACKGROUND: Pr...
In decision making regarding optimal resource allocation to safeguard public health, policymakers an...
In many health decision making situations there is a requirement that the effectiveness of intervent...
In decision making regarding optimal resource allocation to safeguard public health, policymakers an...
Health economics is an evolving field. This article considers operationalising the complexities of i...
AbstractTolerability is an essential part of drug therapy and can affect health and economic outcome...
Introduction: As health-care payers are faced with the need to allocate finite resources to maximiz...
Abstract When performing health economic evaluations all costs and expected benefits (in terms of c...
Despite the growing literature on economic evaluation of health care programmes, little attention ha...