| Literature DB >> 17501999 |
David Lb Schwappach1,2, Till A Boluarte2, Marc Suhrcke3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the quest for public and private resources, prevention continues to face a difficult challenge in obtaining tangible public and political support. This may be partly because the economic evidence in favour of prevention is often said to be largely missing. The overall aim of this paper is to examine whether economic evidence in favour of prevention does exist, and if so, what its main characteristics, weaknesses and strengths are. We concentrate on the evidence regarding primary prevention that targets cardiovascular disease event or risk reduction.Entities:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17501999 PMCID: PMC1876202 DOI: 10.1186/1478-7547-5-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cost Eff Resour Alloc ISSN: 1478-7547
Inclusion criteria
| ■ Studies evaluating primary prevention activities targeted at cardiovascular event or risk reduction, i.e., prevention of the disease before it occurs for the first time; |
| ■ Objective: Screening for and modification of risk factors for primary cardiovascular events; |
| ■ Population: Persons at increased risk but without evidence of cardiovascular disease; |
| ■ Endpoints: Cardiovascular outcomes/events or modified risk factor; |
| ■ Full economic evaluation, i.e., comparative analysis of costs and outcomes of at least two alternatives; |
| ■ Applied study (trial generating primary data or modelling of secondary data). Methodological and general articles, letters and abstracts were excluded; |
| ■ Assessment of, or application to the US, Canadian or European health care systems; |
| ■ Journal articles, i.e., exclusion of books, HTA reports, grey literature; |
| ■ Published between 1995–2005. |
Figure 1Overview of in- and exclusion of studies.
Interventions by prevention category
| Overall (n = 195) | % of studies within category | |
| Education | 7 (4) | 35 |
| Advertising | 4 (2) | 20 |
| Legislation | 8 (4) | 40 |
| Other Health Promotion* | 1 (1) | 5 |
| Health Education | 35 (18) | 21 |
| Pharmacotherapy | 110 (56) | 65 |
| Surgery | 1 (0.4) | 1 |
| Practitioner Education | 13 (7) | 8 |
| Screening and Clinical Intervention | 11 (6) | 7 |
* Summarized over extracted categories
Intervention targets by study setting
| North America | Europe | Total | |
| Intervention target evaluated | |||
| Smoking | 24 (28) | 16 (16) | 40 (22) |
| Obesity | 5 (6) | 5 (5) | 10 (6) |
| Physical inactivity | 2 (2) | 3 (3) | 5 (3) |
| Dietary intake | 8 (10) | 4 (5) | 12 (7) |
| Dyslipidemia | 30 (35) | 26 (27) | 56 (31) |
| High blood pressure | 6 (7) | 18 (18) | 24 (13) |
| High blood glucose levels | 3 (4) | 10 (10) | 13 (7) |
| Atrial fibrillation | 1 (1) | 2 (2) | 3 (2) |
| Various | 6 (7) | 14 (14) | 20 (11) |
Figure 2Age of target population in included studies, as stated by authors.
Characteristics of economic evaluations by publication period
| 1995–2000 (n = 88) | 2001–2005 (n = 107) | 1995–2005 (n = 195) | |
| By Study Type | |||
| Cost effectiveness (life years gained) | 41 (47) | 32 (30) | 73 (37) |
| Cost effectiveness (clinical outcome) | 25 (28) | 28 (26) | 53 (27) |
| Cost utility | 6 (7) | 32 (30) | 38 (20) |
| Cost consequence | 11 (13) | 10 (9) | 21 (11) |
| Cost minimization | 4 (5) | 3 (3) | 7 (4) |
| Cost benefit | 1 (1) | 2 (2) | 3 (2) |
| By Perspective | |||
| Societal | 15 (17) | 23 (22) | 38 (20) |
| Third Party Payer | 28 (32) | 38 (36) | 66 (34) |
| Health care provider | 1 (1) | 3 (3) | 4 (2) |
| Patient | 1 (1) | 1 (1) | 2 (1) |
| Other* | 3 (3) | 1 (1) | 4 (2) |
| Not stated | 40 (46) | 41 (38) | 81 (42) |
| By Funding source | |||
| Government | 20 (23) | 31 (29) | 51 (26) |
| Industry | 22 (25) | 29 (27) | 51 (26) |
| Foundation | 10 (11) | 5 (5) | 15 (8) |
| Other* | 0 (0) | 7 (7) | 7 (4) |
| Not stated | 36 (41) | 35 (33) | 71 (36) |
* Summarized over extracted categories
Methodology for discounting in studies (phase 2)
| No. (%) of studies (n = 35) | |
| Discounting approach | |
| No discounting | 15 (43) |
| Identical discount rates for costs and benefits | 14 (40) |
| Different discount rates for costs and benefits | 2 (6) |
| Only discounting of costs | 2 (6) |
| Only discounting of benefits | 2 (6) |
| Discount rate for costs | |
| 0% | 17 (49) |
| 3% | 11 (31) |
| 5% | 5 (14) |
| 6% | 2 (6) |
| Discount rate for benefits | |
| 0% | 17 (49) |
| 1.5% | 1 (3) |
| 3% | 11 (31) |
| 5% | 5 (14) |
| 6% | 1 (3) |