| Literature DB >> 25246855 |
Ole F Norheim1, Rob Baltussen2, Mira Johri3, Dan Chisholm4, Erik Nord5, DanW Brock6, Per Carlsson7, Richard Cookson8, Norman Daniels9, Marion Danis10, Marc Fleurbaey11, Kjell A Johansson1, Lydia Kapiriri12, Peter Littlejohns13, Thomas Mbeeli14, Krishna D Rao15, Tessa Tan-Torres Edejer3, Dan Wikler9.
Abstract
This Guidance for Priority Setting in Health Care (GPS-Health), initiated by the World Health Organization, offers a comprehensive map of equity criteria that are relevant to health care priority setting and should be considered in addition to cost-effectiveness analysis. The guidance, in the form of a checklist, is especially targeted at decision makers who set priorities at national and sub-national levels, and those who interpret findings from cost-effectiveness analysis. It is also targeted at researchers conducting cost-effectiveness analysis to improve reporting of their results in the light of these other criteria. THE GUIDANCE WAS DEVELOP THROUGH A SERIES OF EXPERT CONSULTATION MEETINGS AND INVOLVED THREE STEPS: i) methods and normative concepts were identified through a systematic review; ii) the review findings were critically assessed in the expert consultation meetings which resulted in a draft checklist of normative criteria; iii) the checklist was validated though an extensive hearing process with input from a range of relevant stakeholders. The GPS-Health incorporates criteria related to the disease an intervention targets (severity of disease, capacity to benefit, and past health loss); characteristics of social groups an intervention targets (socioeconomic status, area of living, gender; race, ethnicity, religion and sexual orientation); and non-health consequences of an intervention (financial protection, economic productivity, and care for others).Entities:
Keywords: Cost-effectiveness; Equity; Population health; Priority setting; Resource allocation
Year: 2014 PMID: 25246855 PMCID: PMC4171087 DOI: 10.1186/1478-7547-12-18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cost Eff Resour Alloc ISSN: 1478-7547
Priority-setting criteria to be considered in conjunction with cost-effectiveness results
| Criteria | Question |
| Severity | Have you considered whether the intervention has special value because of the severity of the health condition (present and future health gap) that the intervention targets? |
| Realization of potential | Have you considered whether the intervention has more value than the effect size alone suggests on the grounds that it does the best possible for a patient group for whom restoration to full health is not possible? |
| Past health loss | Have you considered whether the intervention has special value because it targets a group that has suffered significant past health loss (e.g. chronic disability)? |
| Criteria | Question |
| Socioeconomic status | Have you considered whether the intervention has special value because it can reduce disparities in health associated with unfair inequalities in wealth, income or level of education? |
| Area of living | Have you considered whether the intervention has special value because it can reduce disparities in health associated with area of living? |
| Gender | Have you considered whether the intervention will reduce disparities in health associated with gender? |
| Race, ethnicity, religion and sexual orientation | Have you considered whether the intervention may disproportionally affect groups characterized by race, ethnicity, religion, and sexual orientation? |
| Criteria | Question |
| Economic productivity | Have you considered whether the intervention has special value because it enhances welfare to the individual and society by protecting the target population’s productivity? |
| Care for others | Have you considered whether the intervention has special value because it enhances welfare by protecting the target population’s ability to take care of others? |
| Catastrophic health expenditures | Have you considered whether the intervention has special value because it reduces catastrophic health expenditures for the target population? |