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7th World Congress: Harmonizing Health and Economics

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January

Advances in Health Economics

Editors: Anthony Scott, Alan Maynard, Robert Elliot
ISBN: 0-470-84883-9 Hardcover
Price: US $130.00
Publisher: Wiley

This is a series of essays to mark the 25 anniversary of HERU. Existing and former HERU staff write about their special interests and work records. This book addresses many current policy issues which exist in the Scottish (and English) National Health System.

  • HERU is one of the leading health economic institutes in the UK
  • Contributors are all distinguished members of the health economics community
  • Covers a wide range of issues that are relevant to the application of health economics now and into the future.

List of Essays Included

  • Willingness to Pay for Health Care (C. Donaldson and P. Shackley).
  • Using Discrete Choice Experiments in Health Economics: Moving Forward (M. Ryan and K. Gerard).
  • Methods for Eliciting Time Preferences Over Future Health Events (M. van der Pol and J. Cairns).
  • Economic Evaluation for Decision-making (A. Gray and L. Vale).
  • Incentives in Health Care (A. Scott and S. Farrar).
  • The Nursing Labour Market (R. Elliott, et al.).
  • The Economics of the Hospital: Issues of Asymmetry and Uncertainty as they Affect Hospital Reimbursement (A. McGuire and D. Hughes).
  • Measuring Efficiency in Dental Care (D. Parkin and N. Devlin).
  • Ageing, Disability and Long-term Care Expenditures (P. McNamee and S. Stearns).
  • Economic Challenges in Primary Care (A. Maynard and A. Scott).
  • Equity in Health Care: The Need for a New Economics Paradigm? (G. Mooney and E. Russell).
  • Economics of Health and Health Improvement (A. Ludbrook and D. Cohen).

Review

“…In this brief review it is not possible to do justice to the wealth of materials presented”. (Health Economics, May 2003)

Ordering Information

permalink January 19, 2003: Policy

January

Making Choices in Health: WHO Guide to Cost-Effectiveness Analysis

Editors: T. Tan-Torres Edejer, R. Baltussen, T. Adam, R. Hutubessy, A. Acharya, D.B. Evans, C.J.L. Murray
ISBN: 9241546018
Publisher: World Health Organization

Several guidelines on cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) already exist. There are two reasons for producing another set. The first is that traditional or "incremental" CEA ignores the question of whether the current mix of interventions represents an efficient use of resources. Secondly, the resources required to evaluate the large number of interventions required to use CEA to identify opportunities to enhance efficiency are prohibitive. The approach of generalized CEA proposed in this Guide seeks to provide analysts with a method of assessing whether the current as well as proposed changes to the mix of interventions is efficient. It also seeks to maximize the generalizability of results across settings.

The main objective of this Guide is to provide policy-makers and researchers with a clear understanding of the concepts and benefits of generalized CEA. It provides guidance on how to undertake studies and how to interpret the results. Therefore, the main focus of the Guide is on those methodological issues which make generalized CEA different from traditional analysis in CEA. Attention is also paid to controversial issues in CEA in general and where methodological choices are required, such as the inclusion or exclusion of productivity costs. Furthermore, the Guide provides some detailed discussions on issues which are little debated in the literature but are nevertheless important, for example, the technical approach to the transferability of cost estimates across settings.

The Guide, in Part I, begins with a brief description of generalized CEA and how it relates to the two questions raised above. It then considers issues relating to study design, estimating costs, assessing health effects, discounting, uncertainty and sensitivity analysis, and reporting results. Detailed discussions of selected technical issues and applications are provided in a series of background papers, originally published in journals, but included in this book for easy reference in Part II.

The Guide and these papers are written in the context of the work of WHO-CHOICE: CHOosing Interventions that are Cost-Effective. WHO-CHOICE is assembling regional databases on the costs, impact on population health and cost-effectiveness of key health interventions using standardized methodology and tools. WHO-CHOICE tools on costing (CostIt), population effectiveness modeling (PopMod) and probabilistic uncertainty analysis (MCLeague) are included in the accompanying compact disc.

312pages
Swiss francs: 30.- / US $27.00
In developing countries: Sw.fr. 21.- / US $18.90
Order no. 1150542
Orders to: WHO

permalink January 01, 2003: Methodology

Contact

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Tom GetzenExecutive Director and CEO
215-242-1196

Bill SwanDeputy CEO