“…31,51 In contrast, the relative abundance of health economic studies is clear from international databases of abstracts such as the NHS EED, albeit with some concerns that such studies are less prominent within particular disease classifications, such as mental health and paediatrics. 6,82,83 The evidence presented here suggests considerable variation in the development of infrastructure to support and promote the use of economic evidence in policy making between sectors, between countries and between high-and low-and middle-income countries. However, there is a clear and growing appreciation of the need for such evidence, with investment from many parts of the public policy arena in the advancement of methods for the economic evaluation of public sector services and technologies and the commissioning of economic analyses.…”