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Published in: Cost Effectiveness and Resource Allocation 1/2006

Open Access 01-12-2006 | Research

A population-based model for priority setting across the care continuum and across modalities

Authors: Leonie Segal, Duncan Mortimer

Published in: Cost Effectiveness and Resource Allocation | Issue 1/2006

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Abstract

Background

The Health-sector Wide (HsW) priority setting model is designed to shift the focus of priority setting away from 'program budgets' – that are typically defined by modality or disease-stage – and towards well-defined target populations with a particular disease/health problem.

Methods

The key features of the HsW model are i) a disease/health problem framework, ii) a sequential approach to covering the entire health sector, iii) comprehensiveness of scope in identifying intervention options and iv) the use of objective evidence. The HsW model redefines the unit of analysis over which priorities are set to include all mutually exclusive and complementary interventions for the prevention and treatment of each disease/health problem under consideration. The HsW model is therefore incompatible with the fragmented approach to priority setting across multiple program budgets that currently characterises allocation in many health systems. The HsW model employs standard cost-utility analyses and decision-rules with the aim of maximising QALYs contingent upon the global budget constraint for the set of diseases/health problems under consideration. It is recognised that the objective function may include non-health arguments that would imply a departure from simple QALY maximisation and that political constraints frequently limit degrees of freedom. In addressing these broader considerations, the HsW model can be modified to maximise value-weighted QALYs contingent upon the global budget constraint and any political constraints bearing upon allocation decisions.

Results

The HsW model has been applied in several contexts, recently to osteoarthritis, that has demonstrated both its practical application and its capacity to derive clear evidenced-based policy recommendations.

Conclusion

Comparisons with other approaches to priority setting, such as Programme Budgeting and Marginal Analysis (PBMA) and modality-based cost-effectiveness comparisons, as typified by Australia's Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee process for the listing of pharmaceuticals for government funding, demonstrate the value added by the HsW model notably in its greater likelihood of contributing to allocative efficiency.
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Metadata
Title
A population-based model for priority setting across the care continuum and across modalities
Authors
Leonie Segal
Duncan Mortimer
Publication date
01-12-2006
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Cost Effectiveness and Resource Allocation / Issue 1/2006
Electronic ISSN: 1478-7547
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1478-7547-4-6

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