Methods for the economic evaluation of health care programmes / Michael F. Drummond, Professor, Centre for Health Economics, University of York, UK, [and 4 others].
Material type:
TextSeries: Publisher: Oxford, United Kingdom ; New York, NY, USA : Oxford University Press, 2015Edition: Fourth editionDescription: xiii, 445 pages : illustrationsISBN: - 9780199665877
- 9780199665877
- RA410.5.M48 2015
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Gabriel Afolabi Ojo Central Library (Headquarters). | RA410.5.M48 2015 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 0200392 |
Machine generated contents note: 1. Introduction to economic evaluation -- 1.1. Some basics -- 1.2. Why is economic evaluation important? -- 1.3. The features of economic evaluation -- 1.4. Do all economic evaluations use the same techniques? -- 1.5. Use of economic evaluation in health care decision-making -- 1.6. How to use this book -- 2. Making decisions in health care -- 2.1. Some basics -- 2.2. Informing health care choices -- 2.3. Requirements for economic evaluation -- 2.4. What is the purpose of health care interventions? -- 2.5. Concluding remarks -- 3. Critical assessment of economic evaluation -- 3.1. Some basics -- 3.2. Elements of a sound economic evaluation -- 3.3. Reporting guidelines for economic evaluation -- 3.4. Limitations of economic evaluation techniques -- 3.5. Conclusions -- 3.6. Critical appraisal of published articles -- 4. Principles of economic evaluation -- 4.1. Alternatives, costs, and benefits: some basics -- 4.2. Making decisions about health care -- 4.3. The cost-effectiveness threshold -- 4.4. Making decisions with multiple alternatives -- 4.5. Some methodological implications -- 4.6. Concluding remarks -- 5. Measuring and valuing effects: health gain -- 5.1. Some basics -- 5.2. Using health effects in economic evaluation -- 5.3. Measuring preferences for health states -- 5.4. Methods for measuring preferences -- 5.5. Multi-attribute health status classification systems with preference scores -- 5.6. Mapping between non-preference-based measures of health and generic preference-based measures -- 5.7. Whose values should be used to value health states? -- 5.8. Criticisms of QALYs -- 5.9. Further reading -- 6. Measuring and valuing effects: consumption benefits of health care -- 6.1. Some basics -- 6.2. Assigning money values to the outcomes of health care programmes -- 6.3. What might we mean by willingness to pay (WTP)? -- 6.4. Pragmatic measurement issues in willingness to pay (WTP) -- 6.5. Exercise: designing a willingness-to-pay (WTP) survey for a new treatment for ovarian cancer -- 6.6. Other stated preference approaches: discrete choice experiments (DCEs) -- 6.7. Valuation of health effects for health policy decisions -- 6.8. Further reading -- 7. Cost analysis -- 7.1. Some basics -- 7.2. Allowance for differential timing of costs (discounting and the annuitization of capital expenditures) -- 7.3. Productivity changes -- 7.4. Exercise: costing alternative radiotherapy treatments -- 7.5. Concluding remarks -- Annex 7.1 Tutorial on methods of measuring and valuing capital costs -- Annex 7.2 Discount tables -- 8. Using clinical studies as vehicles for economic evaluation -- 8.1. Introduction to vehicles for economic evaluation -- 8.2. Alternative vehicles for economic evaluation -- 8.3. Analytical issues with individual patient data -- 8.4. Conclusions -- 8.5. Exercise -- 9. Economic evaluation using decision-analytic modelling -- 9.1. Some basics -- 9.2. The role of decision-analytic models for economic evaluation -- 9.3. Key elements of decision-analytic modelling -- 9.4. Stages in the development of a decision-analytic model -- 9.5. Critical appraisal of decision-analytic models -- 9.6. Conclusions -- 9.7. Exercise: developing a decision-analytic model -- Annex 9.1 Checklist for assessing quality in decision-analytic models -- 10. Identifying, synthesizing, and analysing evidence for economic evaluation -- 10.1. Introduction to evidence in economic evaluation -- 10.2. Defining relevant evidence -- 10.3. Identifying and reviewing evidence -- 10.4. Synthesizing evidence -- 10.5. Estimating other parameters for economic evaluation -- 10.6. Conclusions -- 10.7. Exercise -- 11. Characterizing, reporting, and interpreting uncertainty -- 11.1. Some basics -- 11.2. Characterizing uncertainty -- 11.3. Is current evidence sufficient? -- 11.4. Implications for approval and research decisions -- 11.5. Uncertainty, heterogeneity, and individualized care -- 11.6. Concluding remarks -- 12. How to take matters further -- 12.1. Taking matters further -- 12.2. Further reading and key sources of literature -- 12.3. Planning and undertaking an economic evaluation -- 12.4. Expanding your network in economic evaluation -- 12.5. Looking to the future.
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