| Literature DB >> 14711374 |
Lydia Kapiriri1, Trude Arnesen, Ole Frithjof Norheim.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Several studies carried out to establish the relative preference of cost-effectiveness of interventions and severity of disease as criteria for priority setting in health have shown a strong preference for severity of disease. These preferences may differ in contexts of resource scarcity, as in developing countries, yet information is limited on such preferences in this context.Entities:
Year: 2004 PMID: 14711374 PMCID: PMC324572 DOI: 10.1186/1478-7547-2-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cost Eff Resour Alloc ISSN: 1478-7547
Relative importance of cost-effectiveness and severity of disease: sample results from the qualitative study
| Ranks | Groups | ||||
| Patients with HIV and Hypertension | General population | Out-patients | Health workers | District planners | |
| 1 | Severity | Severity | Severity | Severity | Cost of care |
| 2 | Cost of care | Number affected | Number affected | Affects children | Effectiveness of treatment |
| 3 | Conditions that are difficult to manage | Affects disadvantaged | Community felt problem | Cost of care | Community felt problem |
| 4 | Equity | Affects development | Affects children | Number affected | Severity |
| 5 | Number affected | Ease of intervention | Gender | Availability of effective treatment | Consequences of problem |
| 6 | Equality | Community felt problem | Availability of effective treatment | Benefit of intervention | Ease of intervention |
| 7 | Availability of Effective treatment | Cost of care | Equity | Consequences of condition | Affects children |
| 8 | Person responsible for cause | Effectiveness of intervention | Preventable | Equity | Affects disadvantaged |
The values are reported as mentioned in the group discussions
Figure 1Schematic presentation of the three scenarios. Cost-effectiveness of A=B in Scenario 1, A>B in Scenario 2 and 3.
Demographic characteristics of the survey respondents (n= 413)
| Characteristic | Frequency (%) |
| Age | |
| <25 | 7 |
| 25–35 | 49 |
| 36–45 | 33 |
| 46–55 | 9 |
| 55+ | 1 |
| Designation | |
| Medical doctor | 33 |
| Allied health worker* | 46 |
| Administrator | 7 |
| Politician | 2 |
| Other** | 13 |
| Level of work | |
| National | 9 |
| District | 6 |
| Health facility | 51 |
| Teaching hospital | 16 |
| UN | 3 |
| Other** | 14 |
| Does respondents consider priority setting as their work? | |
| Yes | 88 |
| No | 12 |
* Other health workers at health facility level who are not doctors **Other were representatives from the general public
Figure 2The actual and ideal rank given to various stakeholders' role in priority setting.
Respondents' opinion about considering cost-effectiveness or disease severity in priority setting (n = 413).
| Responses (%) | ||||||
| Strongly agree | Agree | Neutral | Disagree | Strongly disagree | Don't know | |
| 1. Cost-effectiveness of the intervention | 63.6 | 25.7 | 4.0 | 3.4 | 1.1 | 2.3 |
| 2. Severity of the condition | 62.9 | 26.9 | 4.5 | 2.8 | 1.7 | 1.1 |
Test for associations between the respondent's characteristics
| Respondents' characteristics | Age | Designation | Level of priority setting | Consider priority setting as part of their work |
| Age | - | NS | ++ | + |
| Designation | NS | - | ++ | ++ |
| Level of priority setting | ++ | ++ | - | NS |
| Consider priority setting as part of their work | + | ++ | NS | - |
NS = Not significant + = p < 0.05 ++= p < 0.001 Reference categories: Age =<35 years; Designation = health worker Respondent consider priority setting as part of their duty Level of work = Respondent works at national level
Test for associations between responses to the three scenarios and the respondents' characteristics
| Characteristics | Odds ratios(confidence intervals) | ||
| Scenario 1 | Scenario 2 | Scenario 3 | |
| Age | 0.94 (.47–1.88) | 1.30 (.67–2.48) | 1.17 (.67–2.03) |
| Designation | 1.99 (.56–7.12) | 0.24 (.05–1.08) | 1.91 (.86–4.28) |
| Level of work | 0.77 (.29–2.04) | 1.43 (.57–3.61) | 1.12 (.56–2.23) |
| Respondent consider priority setting as part of there work | 0.82 (.22–3.10) | 1.53 (.44–5.30) | 0.55 (.13–2.20) |
Reference categories: Age =<35 years; Designation = health worker Respondent consider priority setting as part of their duty Level of work = Respondent works at national level
Figure 3Respondent's choices in the three different scenarios.
Reasons and comments by the development partners (from the in-depth study) and survey respondents.
| Preference | Reasons |
| Survey Respondents: | |
| Severity | Save life. Severity is most important, all factors being equal. Treat the severely ill to save life. It does not matter whether or not treatment is cost-effective. Treat severely ill if he will recover. Give benefit to the severely ill irrespective of other conditions |
| Cost-effectiveness | Treat the less severely ill because the severely ill might die anyway. |
| Equal distribution | It is unethical to treat one person and not the other. Treat both patients because it is unethical to withhold treatment however expensive. |
| In-depth interviews: | "Our goal is to get maximum benefit out of our money" "Cost-effectiveness is extremely important, we have money for value evaluation" "Cost-effectiveness is very important, we have the history from the United States" "It is important because we have to give an account to the government that support us" "Since we are not a donor organisation, this is important to us" "Cost-effectiveness is considered but does not over rule other criteria" "Cost-effectiveness is usually a work of economists who have never seen a suffering patient, they see just figures. You cannot tell someone who is sick that you are not in my package" |
| Other reasons | There are other considerations, e.g. age, social factors, if one of them is scheduled for execution due to a crime and is to be executed within 2 days, I would not treat him. Treat disease that affects many people although it may not be severe (or cost-effective). Treat one with less costly treatment Treat one who is likely to recover from treatment whatever the cost. The decision of who to treat involves more than just cost-effectiveness Difficult to decide. |
Figure 4Potential policy implications for the trade off between cost-effectiveness of intervention and severity of disease. The essential national health package is based on the most cost-effective interventions (line parallel to the x-severity axis) against the leading causes of severity of disease (line parallel to the Y-cost-effective axis). Transparent criteria need to be developed in case of expansion of the package to include other interventions. In case cost-effectiveness is the criteria, then expansion should be in the direction of arrow (a), in case it is severity, then one should consider (b).