| Literature DB >> 28905279 |
Natalie Carvalho1, Mark Jit2,3, Sarah Cox4, Joanne Yoong5,6, Raymond C W Hutubessy7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In low- and middle-income countries, budget impact is an important criterion for funding new interventions, particularly for large public health investments such as new vaccines. However, budget impact analyses remain less frequently conducted and less well researched than cost-effectiveness analyses.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 28905279 PMCID: PMC5775390 DOI: 10.1007/s40273-017-0569-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacoeconomics ISSN: 1170-7690 Impact factor: 4.981
Study inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Include | Exclude |
|---|---|
| Publisheda from January 2000 to February 2017 | Publisheda before 2000 |
| Focused on one or more LMICb | Focused on high-income country(ies) |
| Target population children under 5 years of age | Target population children over 5 years of age or unspecified |
| Intervention is any rotavirus vaccine delivered in any manner | N/A |
| Full-text paper | Abstracts, posters or presentations |
| 1. Study self-described as a BIA | 1. Fiscal, revenue or cost-benefit analyses, or costing studies that do not capture both: |
BIA budget impact analysis, CEA cost-effectiveness analysis, CUA cost-utility analysis, LMIC low- and middle-income country, N/A not applicable
a If unpublished, refers to date reported
b Based on World Bank Analytical Classification using gross national income per capita (Atlas methodology), based on the World Bank’s fiscal year at the time of publication
Items included in the budget impact analysis (BIA) checklist and modified BIA checklist for cost-effectiveness analysis
| Item no. | Category/itema | Recommendation summaryb | Classification for modified BIA checklist for CEA |
|---|---|---|---|
| Background | |||
| 1. | Healthcare system/setting | Consider relevant features of the healthcare system that may influence budget and possible access restrictions | Desirable |
| 2. | Study perspective | Perspective should be that of the decision maker/budget holder | Essential |
| 3. | Eligible population | Estimate size of eligible population, and distribution of any characteristics that may influence budget impact | Essential: specify size of eligible population |
| Desirable: describe characteristics/justify population size estimates | |||
| Interventions | |||
| 4. | Current interventions | Lay out the current mix of interventions (use and effects) and the expected mix after the introduction of the new intervention | Essential: health systems costs included |
| Desirable: microcosting of healthcare systems costs | |||
| 5. | Uptake of new intervention | Take into account the anticipated uptake of the new intervention | Essential: report coverage level of new intervention |
| Desirable: discussion of where coverage estimates come from | |||
| 6. | Costs of introducing new intervention | Identify all cost categories included. Describe approaches used to estimate costs of new intervention | Essential: all intervention cost categories included |
| Desirable: microcosting of intervention costs | |||
| 7. | Impact on healthcare systems costs | A description of how the intervention’s impact on healthcare costs was modelled should be included, including estimation of indirect effects where relevant | Essential: model impact of intervention |
| Desirable: describe how intervention impact was modelled | |||
| Analytic framework | |||
| 8. | Time horizon | State and justify the time horizon(s) over which costs and consequences are being evaluated. Time horizon should be appropriate to the budget holder | Essential: time horizon stated |
| Desirable: time horizon justified | |||
| 9. | Discounting and time dependencies | Financial streams at each budget period should be undiscounted. Other aspects that vary over time (inflation/deflation, changes in price) should be included | Essential |
| 10. | Model type | Describe and justify the specific type of model used | Essential: report model used |
| Desirable: describe model used | |||
| 11. | Data sources | Specify data sources and, if possible, obtain estimates directly from budget holders | Desirable |
| Results | |||
| 12. | Cost estimates/budget impact | Present results (both resource use and costs) for each budget period after the new intervention is adopted | Essential |
| 13. | Validity | Determine face validity through: (1) agreement with relevant decision makers on the computing framework, aspects included, and how they are addressed; and (2) verification of cost calculator or model implementation, including all formulas | Desirable |
| 14. | Uncertainty and scenario analyses | Present alternative scenarios (e.g. allow users to view results with and without condition-related costs, to include or exclude different categories of costs) | Desirable |
| 15. | Conclusions and limitations | State main conclusions on the basis of the results of the BIA. Report the main limitations regarding key issues including assumptions and completeness and quality of data inputs and sources | Desirable |
CEA cost-effectiveness analysis
a Each item gets a maximum score of 1 and a minimum score of 0. Items subdivided into ‘Essential’ and ‘Desirable’ components are scored 0/0.5 for each sub-component such that the maximum still sums to 1 for each item. Maximum score for the full checklist is 15 points. Maximum score for Essential vs. Desirable items in the modified BIA checklist for CEA are six and nine points, respectively
b Adapted from Sullivan et al. (2014) (International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research Task Force on Good Research Practices—Budget Impact Analysis)
Fig. 1Literature search flow diagram. BIAs budget impact analyses, CEAs cost-effectiveness analyses, NHS EED RePEc. aIncluding one article in Russian for which full text was sought but could not be obtained and one PhD dissertation thesis under embargo until 2018
Fig. 2Average budget impact analysis checklist scoring for budget impact analysis papers (n = 6). Average score (range in brackets) shown for each category. Average overall quality score for all budget impact analysis papers reviewed: 11.9 (10.5, 13.5) out of 15 possible points. Each category is worth 0, 0.5 or 1 point (maximum = 1)
Fig. 3Average modified checklist scoring for cost-effectiveness analysis papers (n = 60). Average score (range in brackets) shown for each ‘Essential’ category. Average overall feasibility score for all cost-effectiveness analysis papers reviewed: 4.7 (3, 6.5) out of 6.5 possible points. Each category with a solid line is worth 0, 0.5 or 1 point (maximum = 1). Each starred category with a dashed line is worth 0 or 0.5 points (maximum = 0.5)
| Despite their equal importance in aiding decision makers to allocate limited resources, fewer budget impact analyses are published in the literature compared with cost-effectiveness analyses. |
| Furthermore, published budget impact analyses do not meet current best-practice recommendations such as not discounting future costs, providing annual or budget relevant financial streams of costs, model validation, and sensitivity and scenario analyses among others. |
| The proposed framework through which cost-effectiveness analyses could be used as a tool to provide useful budget impact analysis information could facilitate the uptake and improvement of good-quality budget impact analyses that would be useful for decision makers, in particular in low- and middle-income countries. |