| Literature DB >> 34923970 |
Jaithri Ananthapavan1,2, Marj Moodie3,4, Andrew Milat5,6, Lennert Veerman7, Elizabeth Whittaker5, Rob Carter3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Australian governments are increasingly mandating the use of cost-benefit analysis (CBA) to inform the efficient allocation of government resources. CBA is likely to be useful when evaluating preventive health interventions that are often cross-sectoral in nature and require Cabinet approval prior to implementation. This study outlines a CBA framework for the evaluation of preventive health interventions that balances the need for consistency with other agency guidelines whilst adhering to guidelines and conventions for health economic evaluations.Entities:
Keywords: Cost–benefit analysis; Decision-making; Health policy; Preventive health
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34923970 PMCID: PMC8684630 DOI: 10.1186/s12961-021-00796-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Res Policy Syst ISSN: 1478-4505
Australian federal and NSW government departments and agencies included in the website search
| Federal government | Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet Office of Best Practice Regulation |
| The Treasury | |
| Department of Finance | |
| Department of Health—the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee | |
| Productivity Commission | |
| Infrastructure Australia | |
| NSW government central agencies | NSW Treasury |
| NSW Department of Premier and Cabinet | |
| Department of Finance, Services and Innovation (now part of the Department of Customer Service) | |
| NSW government line agencies | NSW Ministry of Health Health Infrastructure Centre for Epidemiology and Evidence |
| Transport for NSW | |
| Infrastructure NSW | |
| NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment |
Overview of the key economic evaluation guidance documents
| Jurisdiction | Department | Document title | Aims of document and overview of CBA guidance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Federal | PM&C (OBPR) | Cost–benefit analysis guidance note (2020) [ | To provide Australian government and COAG policy-makers guidance on the use of CBA for policy proposals To promote comparability and consistency in decision-making and help maximize net benefits to society It provides an introduction to CBA for regulatory proposals, with readers referred to the |
| Federal | Finance and Administration | Handbook of Cost–Benefit Analysis January (2006) [ | To provide Australian government agencies guidance on the use of CBA for economic appraisal and decision-making and to provide details on the process of conducting CBA It provides no guidance on when CBA should be used |
| Federal | Infrastructure Australia | Assessment framework: for initiatives and projects to be included in the Infrastructure Priority List (2018) [ | To provide guidance on the assessment framework used by Infrastructure Australia to consider projects for inclusion in the Infrastructure Priority List A detailed CBA is a central component of the business case |
| Federal | Health | Guidelines for preparing a submission to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee (2016) [ | To ensure consistent, standardized submissions for consideration by the PBAC for the listing of new medicines on the PBS To ensure comparability of submissions to facilitate consistency in decision-making CUA rather than CBA is the preferred approach outlined in the guidance |
| NSW | Treasury | NSW Government Guide to Cost–Benefit Analysis (2017) [ | To promote a consistent approach to appraisal and evaluation of publicly funded initiatives across the NSW government It advises that CBA guidelines by line agencies that are consistent with the framework and principles of this guide can be used for sector-specific evaluations It recommends that line agencies integrate CBA into decision-making processes |
| NSW | Transport | Transport for NSW Cost–Benefit Analysis Guide (2019) [ | To outline the principles, concepts, methodology and procedures for conducting CBA for NSW Transport initiatives CBA is the preferred evaluation method and the key tool that is required both for compliance and to promote value-for-money government decision-making The guide outlines a consistent and best practice framework for NSW Transport evaluations. However, it emphasizes that it does not enforce compliance The guidance is aligned to NSW Treasury CBA guidance [ |
| NSW | Planning, Industry and Environment | Guidelines for using cost–benefit analysis to assess coastal management options (2018) [ | To provide specific guidance for LGA CBA related to coastal management It states that CBA is not a good use of council resources for all projects and should be used when making complex and high-risk decisions |
| NSW | Health (Health Infrastructure) | Guide to Cost–Benefit Analysis of Health Capital Projects (2018) [ | To provide the principles, concepts and methodology to evaluate NSW Health capital projects To ensure that a robust analysis of the costs and benefits are considered in decision-making To provide a consistent and standardized approach to facilitate comparisons across capital projects The guidance is supplementary to the NSW Treasury CBA guidance [ |
| NSW | Health (Centre for Epidemiology and Evidence) | Commissioning Economic Evaluations: A Guide (2017) [ | This is not a guidance document on CBA, but aims to assist NSW Health staff commission economic evaluations, particularly related to population health programmes The document focuses on ex-post evaluations and states that the primary aim of economic evaluation is to inform the investment decision |
CBA cost–benefit analysis, COAG Council of Australian Governments, CUA cost-utility analysis, LGA local government area, NSW New South Wales, OBPR Office of Best Practice Regulation, PBAC Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee, PBS Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, PM&C Prime Minister and Cabinet
Guidance related to perspective, comparator/base case, options for appraisal, time horizon and discount rate
| Document title | Perspective and referent group | Comparator/base case | Options for appraisal, (number and specifications) | Time horizon | Discount rate theoretical foundation and value for primary analysis (range for sensitivity analyses) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cost–benefit analysis guidance note (2020) [ | Societal: impacts on all Australian residents | Business as usual, do nothing | ≥ 3; 1 non-regulatory option | Life of policy; 10 years for regulatory costs [ | Opportunity cost of capital: 7% (3% and 10%) |
| Handbook of Cost–Benefit Analysis January (2006) [ | Societal | Business as usual, do nothing | Not specified | Life of policy | Opportunity cost of capital: no values given |
| Assessment framework: for initiatives and projects to be included in the Infrastructure Priority List (2018) [ | Societal: Australian community | Do minimum | Step 1: high-level MCA on long list of options. Step 2: rapid CBA on short list and more detailed MCA. Step 3: detailed CBA on final short list (≥ 2 options) | Life of asset. Duration needs to be justified | Theory not stated: 7% (4% and 10%) |
| Guidelines for preparing a submission to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee (2016) [ | Healthcare system Optional: Societal | Existing technology/clinical practice replaced by the proposed medicine | Proposed new medicine | Duration to capture all important differences in costs and benefits between intervention and comparator | Theory not stated: 5% (0% & 3.5%) |
| NSW Government Guide to Cost–Benefit Analysis (2017) [ | Societal: NSW community | Business as usual, no policy change, status quo | Full range of realistic options; variations in scale and scope, targeting supply and demand, alternative implementation plans | Life of policy/asset; 20–30 years | Opportunity cost of capital: 7% (3% and 10%) |
| Transport for NSW Cost–Benefit Analysis Guide (2019) [ | Cites NSW Treasury guidance [ | Business as usual, do minimum | ≥ 3 for large projects and ≥ 2 for smaller projects | Life of asset. Cites NSW Treasury guidance [ | Social rate of time preference: cites NSW Treasury guidance [ |
| Guidelines for using cost–benefit analysis to assess coastal management options (2018) [ | Societal: LGA community | Continuation of current management, business as usual | Number not specified. Options should be discrete and not reliant on other options. Variations in options treated as individual options | Life of project. Cites NSW Treasury guidance [ | Theory not stated: cites NSW Treasury guidance [ |
| Guide to Cost–Benefit Analysis of Health Capital Projects (2018) [ | Cites NSW Treasury guidance [ | Status quo, keep safe and operating | Step 1: high-level CBA on long list of options. Stage 2: detailed CBA on short list (≥ 2 options) | Practical asset life; 20–30 years | Cites NSW Treasury guidance [ |
| Commissioning Economic Evaluations: A Guide (2017) [ | Health sector Optional: whole of government, societal | Current practice | Not specified (focus of guidance on ex-post evaluations) | Length of time over which outcomes are likely to accrue | Reports recommended rates vary by jurisdiction. Cites NSW Treasury guidance [ |
CBA cost–benefit analysis, LGA local government area, MCA multi-criteria analysis, NSW New South Wales, OBPR Office of Best Practice Regulation, PM&C Prime Minister and Cabinet
Guidance related to quantification and valuation of impacts, decision rules, sensitivity analyses and other considerations
| Document title | Costs and benefits | Valuation of non-market benefits | Key decision rules | Sensitivity/uncertainty analyses | Other considerations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cost–benefit analysis guidance note (2020) [ | Productivity identified as first-round impacts Exclude: second-round impacts (e.g. land use) | Quantify if able, otherwise qualitative assessment RP preferred, SP, benefit transfer VSL (A$ 2021) = 5.1 M VSLY (A$ 2021) = $222,000 [ | NPV | Worst/best-case, one-way, Monte Carlo methods | Distributional impacts |
| Handbook of Cost–Benefit Analysis January (2006) [ | Productivity identified as a benefit of health interventions Exclude: WEB including employment multipliers, second-round impacts | Quantify if able. Non quantified impacts are called “intangibles” and should be described qualitatively RP, SP, benefit transfer | NPV. Cautious use of BCR which can be biased towards small projects | Worst case, one-way, Monte Carlo methods for complex cases | Distributional impacts |
| Assessment framework: for initiatives and projects to be included in the Infrastructure Priority List (2018) [ | Productivity identified as a benefit Categorized into impacts on users and producers and external impacts to broader community Where appropriate include: WEB, second-round land-use benefits | Quantify if able, otherwise qualitative assessment RP, SP, replacement cost method, benefit transfer | NPV, BCR Others: NPV per dollar of capital investment, first year rate of return | Time horizon: 30 and 50 years Include/exclude WEB Best-case scenario: −20% costs and + 20% benefits/upside adjustment for 4–5 key variables Worst-case scenario: + 20% costs and − 20% benefits/downside adjustment for 4–5 key variables Monte Carlo—probability distribution of project costs with 50% and 90% probability that the cost won’t be exceeded | WEB, land-use impacts, productivity, urban regeneration, local equity and distributional impacts |
| Guidelines for preparing a submission to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee (2016) [ | Include: all health sector impacts Exclude: non-health sector costs, productivity impacts in primary analysis | Recommends population preference weights for health state utility calculation | ICER; $ per QALY gained | Requires extensive one-way, multi-way, Monte Carlo methods | Equity of access to medicine |
| NSW Government Guide to Cost–Benefit Analysis (2017) [ | Productivity is a direct impact on individuals and an indirect impact on employers Include: first-round impacts (direct and indirect) Exclude: second-round impacts (e.g. WEB, land value uplift) | Quantify if able, otherwise qualitative assessment Valuation based on individuals/firms that experience outcomes RP preferred, SP, benefit transfer | NPV, BCR. BCR used when there are differences in ranking between NPV and BCR | All key values and assumptions using one-way, scenario, best/worst-case, Monte Carlo methods WEB and land uplift can be included in best-case scenario | Distributional impacts |
| Transport for NSW Cost–Benefit Analysis Guide (2019) [ | Impacts on the user, social, government, dis-benefits, other impacts (WEB, land value uplift, option value and nonuse value, improvements to place) Exclude WEB in primary analysis, take care when using land uplift values | Quantify if able, otherwise qualitative assessment RP, SP VSL (A$ 2019) = 7.6 M [ | NPV, BCR. BCR used when differences in ranking between NPV and BCR | Deterministic and probabilistic (Monte Carlo) methods | Distributional impacts |
| Guidelines for using cost–benefit analysis to assess coastal management options (2018) [ | Include: Direct and indirect impacts and externalities (use and nonuse values) Exclude: second-round impacts | Quantify if able, otherwise qualitative assessment RP, SP, benefit transfer | NPV, BCR. No advice on the more appropriate option when ranking differs. Reports decision-making should be based on both criteria | All key values and assumptions tested using Monte Carlo methods | Distributional impacts across public and private sector stakeholders Second-round impacts to local businesses, employment, income and social cohesiveness impacts |
| Guide to Cost–Benefit Analysis of Health Capital Projects (2018) [ | Productivity direct impact on individuals and indirect impact on employers Include: first-round impacts (direct and indirect) Exclude: second-round impacts (e.g. WEB, land value uplift) | Quantify if able, otherwise qualitative assessment RP preferred, SP, benefit transfer Methods for valuation of health benefits by service stream provided in the CBA toolkit [ VSL (A$ 2018/19) = $4.5 M VSLY (A$ 2018/19) = $195,000 | NPV, BCR. BCR used when differences in ranking between NPV and BCR | All key values and assumptions tested using one-way, scenario, best/worst-case, Monte Carlo methods | Distributional impacts |
| Commissioning Economic Evaluations: A Guide (2017) [ | Impacts measured and quantified depend on the perspective of the evaluation. Include: direct (provider costs), indirect (patient, family, including absenteeism), cost offsets (health sector cost savings), non-healthcare cost offsets (cost savings to other sectors) | Health valued using QALY and DALY. Reports there are equity concerns for using WTP values to monetize health benefits, as WTP is associated with ability to pay | ICER Reports PBAC threshold based on previous decisions (A$ 37,000–69,000 per life-year gained) | One-way, scenario, Monte Carlo methods | Distributional impacts |
A$ Australian dollars, BCR benefit–cost ratio, CBA cost–benefit analysis, DALY disability-adjusted life-year, ICER incremental cost-effectiveness ratio, NPV net present value, NSW New South Wales, PBAC Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee, QALY quality-adjusted life-year, RP revealed preference, SP stated preference, VSL value of a statistical life, VSLY value of a statistical life-year, WEB wider economic benefits, WTP willingness to pay
CBA components that have relatively good agreement, poor agreement and flexibility in application
| CBA component | Areas of agreement | Areas of disagreement | Areas of flexibility |
|---|---|---|---|
| When to conduct a CBA | Commensurate with the scale of investment Required for investments over A$ 10 million | CBA not recommended for primary analysis by PBAC | Type of analysis that is appropriate for investments less than A$ 10 million |
| Perspective and referent group | Societal perspective for CBA | The referent group or standing varies from communities within LGAs, the state jurisdiction and whole of Australia Health perspective recommended by PBAC using CUA | |
| Comparator/base case | Well-defined status quo. Avoidance of “straw man” comparator | Terminology (base case versus comparator) | |
| Options for appraisal | A range of realistic options should be included | The number of options included | The nature of options included |
| Time horizon | Principle that the time horizon should be the economic life of the project Longer time horizons are associated with increased uncertainty | Appropriate time horizons for various interventions | |
| Social discount rate | Theoretical basis for social discount rate The rate to be used in primary and sensitivity analyses | ||
| Costs and benefits | Second-round impacts excluded in primary analyses | The appropriate value for the VSL and VSLY | Technique for estimating non-market impacts Inclusion of productivity impacts |
| Decision rules | NPV and BCR should be reported | The preferred outcome measure (NPV or BCR) when these measures give varied results | |
| Sensitivity analyses | Extensive uncertainty analysis should be undertaken to test the impact of key assumptions and variables | Terminology (uncertainty analysis, risk analysis, sensitivity analysis) | Type of analyses: one-way, scenario, best/worst-case, Monte-Carlo simulations |
| Distributional impacts and other considerations | Distributional impacts should not be incorporated into technical results Distributional impacts should be considered by decision-makers | Method of undertaking distributional analysis | |
| Reporting | All critical assumptions and input parameters should be documented with supporting evidence | Reporting standardized but varied across guidelines |
A$ Australian dollars, BCR benefit–cost ratio, CBA cost–benefit analysis, CUA cost-utility analysis, LGA local government area, NPV net present value, NSW New South Wales, PBAC Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee, VSL value of a statistical life, VSLY value of a statistical life-year
Recommendations for the Preventive Health CBA Framework and associated rationale
| CBA component | Key recommendation [rationale] |
|---|---|
| When to conduct a CBA | Investments over A$ 10 million [ii; iv] For investments less than A$ 10 million, CBA should be commensurate with the size of investment and built into the decision-making process [iv; v] |
| Perspective and referent group | Primary analysis using a societal perspective [i—clear concept of benefit; ii] Health sector perspective for additional analyses [iii] State-based community referent group [iv; v] |
| Comparator/base case | Defined as the status quo [i—comparative analysis; ii; iii] Comparator referred to as the base case [ii] |
| Options for appraisal | Number of options commensurate with the size of the investment [i—comparative analysis; iv] Options underpinned by government health strategy [v] MCA to establish short tractable list of options for detailed CBA. The MCA should use criteria commonly used in preventive health decision-making [ii; iv] |
| Time horizon | Up to 30 years based on the nature of the intervention [ii] and lifetime/100 years if 30 years unlikely to capture all important impacts [i—capture the full economic life of project; iii]. The most appropriate time horizon with justification should be used for the primary analysis, with the other used in sensitivity analyses |
| Social discount rate | Base case 3% [i; iii] Sensitivity analyses using 0%, 5%, 7% and 10% [ii; v] |
| Costs and benefits | All impacts consistent with societal perspective identified, including healthcare costs borne by all payers (including federal government) [i—clear concept of benefit, opportunity cost; iii; iv]. Important impacts measured and valued [iv]. This should be commensurate with the size of investment Report proportion of healthcare cost/cost savings that will accrue to state government compared to other funders [ii; v] Develop logic models to identify potential impacts across all sectors [i—opportunity cost] Quantify and value significant impacts across all sectors and report these by sector [iii] Quantify health impacts using health-related quality-of-life measures (QALY or DALY) [iii] Value DALY/QALY using VSLY (A$ 303,531, in 2017 values). This value should be consistent across all CBAs across all jurisdictions [ii] Productivity impacts excluded in primary analysis [iii; iv] Sensitivity analyses: VSLY values: A$ 315,732 and A$ 88,136 (in 2017 values). A range of values should be tested when using a health sector perspective VSLY to value life-years (LY) rather than DALYs/QALYs Include indirect productivity impacts on employers using the FCA and gender-free wage rates |
| Decision rules | NPV and BCR. BCR basis of decision-making when intervention rankings differ between the two [ii] All impacts resulting from an intervention should be accounted for on the benefits side of the equation when calculating BCR [ii] |
| Sensitivity analyses | One-way, scenario and probabilistic sensitivity analyses undertaken to assess the variability in the results [ii; iii; v] All input parameters and assumptions should be documented with mean values, distributions and the sources [v] Avoid the terms “uncertainty analysis” and “risk analysis” |
| Distributional impacts and other considerations | Primary analyses should not include equity or other impacts in the technical CBA results [ii] Full description of equity and distributional impacts with quantification of impacts across subgroups where appropriate [v] Full description of other important considerations related to preventive health interventions reported qualitatively and quantitatively [v] |
| Reporting | Full description of options for appraisal and the assumptions and inputs used in the analysis [v] Results disaggregated by sector and reported by method of measurement [iii; v] Full documentation and interpretation of primary analysis, sensitivity analyses and distributional impacts [v] |
Rationales: (i) economic theory, (ii) consistency of CBA across different state government departments, (iii) consistency with other health intervention evaluations and the ease of moving from a CBA to a more conventional CEA/CUA framework used for health interventions, (iv) the practicalities of application by busy government bureaucrats, and (v) the needs of the end user
A$ Australian dollars, BCR benefit–cost ratio, CBA cost–benefit analysis, CUA cost-utility analysis, DALY disability-adjusted life-year, FCA friction cost approach, MCA multi-criteria analysis, NPV net present value, NSW New South Wales, PBAC Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee, QALY quality-adjusted life-year, VSL value of a statistical life, VSLY value of a statistical life-year