MCDA (EVIDEM framework) could be a useful tool to complement the current evaluation methods of CatSalut, contributing to standardization and pragmatism, providing a method to tackle ethical dilemmas and facilitating discussions related to decision making.
Overall, DBS requires less use of health resources than CDLCI or CSAI in advanced PD patients, mostly pharmacological. The initial DBS investment was offset at year 2 by reductions in the ongoing consumption of anti-Parkinsonian medication. For every patient treated annually with CDLCI or CSAI, substantial cost savings could be made with DBS.
Background: Relative effectiveness has become a key concern of health
policy. In Europe, this is because of the need for early information to guide
reimbursement and funding decisions about new medical technologies. However, ways that
effectiveness (does it work?) and efficacy (can it work?) might differ across health
systems are poorly understood.Methods: This study proposes an analytical framework, drawing on production
function theory, to systematically identify and quantify the determinants of relative
effectiveness and sources of variation between populations and healthcare systems. We
consider how methods such as stochastic frontier analysis and data envelopment analysis
using a Malmquist productivity index could in principle be used to generate evidence on,
and improve understanding about, the sources of variation in relative effectiveness
between countries and over time.Results: Better evidence on factors driving relative effectiveness could:
inform decisions on how to best use a new technology to maximum effectiveness; establish
the need if any for follow-up post-launch studies, and provide evidence of the impact of
new health technologies on outcomes in different healthcare systems.Conclusions: The health production function approach for assessment of
relative effectiveness is complementary to traditional experimental and observational
studies, focusing on identifying, collecting, and analyzing data at the national level,
enabling comparisons to take place. There is a strong case for exploring the use of this
approach to better understand the impact of new medicines and devices for improvements in
health outcomes.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.