About the Book: The purpose of economic evaluation is to inform decisions intended to
improve healthcare. The new edition of Methods for the Economic Evaluation of
Health Care Programmes equips the reader with the necessary skills and
understanding required to undertake evaluations by providing an outline of key
principles and a 'tool kit' based on the authors' own experiences of
undertaking economic evaluations. Building on the strength of the previous edition, the accessible
writing style ensures the text is key reading for the non-expert, as no prior
knowledge of economics is required. The book employs a critical appraisal
framework, which is useful both to researchers conducting studies and to
decision-makers assessing them. Practical examples are provided throughout to
aid learning and understanding. The book analyses the Methodological and policy challenges that face
health systems in seeking to allocate resources efficiently and fairly. New
chapters include 'Principles of economic evaluation' and 'Making decisions in
healthcare' which introduces the reader to core issues and questions about
resource allocation, and provides an understanding of the fundamental
principles which guide decision making. A key part of evidence-based decision making is the analysis of all the
relevant evidence to make informed decisions and policy. The new chapter
'Identifying, synthesizing and analysing evidence for economic evolution' highlights
the importance of systematic review, and how and why these methods are used. As
methods of analysis continue to develop, the chapter on 'Characterizing,
reporting and interpreting uncertainty' introduces the reader to recent methods
of analysis and why characterizing uncertainty matters for health care
decisions.
The fourth edition of Methods for the Economic
Evaluation of Health Care Programmes has been thoroughly revised and updated,
making it essential reading for anyone commissioning, undertaking, or using
economic evaluations in health care, including health service professionals,
health economists, and health care decision-makers. |
Contents:
1. Introduction to economic
evaluation 2.
Making decisions in
healthcare 3.
Critical assessment of
economic evaluation 4.
Principles of economic
evaluation 5.
Measuring and valuing
effects: health gain 6.
Measuring and valuing
effects: consumption benefits of health care 7.
Cost analysis 8.
Using clinical studies as a
vehicle for economic evaluation 9.
Economic evaluation using
decision analytic modelling 10. Identifying, synthesizing, and analysing evidence for economic
evaluation 11. Characterizing, reporting, and interpreting uncertainty
12. How to take matters further
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About the Authors:
Michael F. Drummond, BSc, MCom, DPhil is Professor of Health Economics and former Director
of the Centre for Health Economics at the University of York. His particular
field of interest is in the economic evaluation of health care treatments and
programmes. He has undertaken evaluations in a wide range of medical fields
including care of the elderly, neonatal intensive care, immunization
programmes, services for people with AIDS, eye health care and pharmaceuticals.
He is the author of two major textbooks and more than 650 scientific papers,
and has acted as a consultant to the World Health Organization and the European
Union. He has been President of the International Society of Technology
Assessment in Health Care, and the International Society for Pharmacoeconomics
and Outcomes Research. In October 2010 he was made a member of the Institute of
Medicine in the USA. He is currently Co-Editor-in-Chief of Value in Health.
Mark J. Sculpher is Professor of Health Economics at the Centre for Health Economics,
University of York, UK where he is Director of the Programme on Economic
Evaluation and Health Technology Assessment. Mark has worked in the field of
economic evaluation and health technology assessment since 1987. He has
researched in a range of clinical areas including heart disease, cancer,
diagnostics and public health. He has also contributed to methods in the field,
in particular relating to decision analytic modelling and techniques to handle
uncertainty, heterogeneity and generalisability. He has also been a member of various
decision-making bodies within the National Institute for Health and Care
Excellence (NICE) and is a former president of the International Society of
Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research (ISPOR).
Karl Claxton is a Professor in the Department of Economics and the Centre for
Health Economics at the University of York, where he leads the economic
evaluation component of the Health Economics MSc. He is a past co-editor of the
Journal of Health Economics and for many years held an adjunct appointment at
the Harvard School of Public Health. He was a founding member of the NICE
Technology Appraisal Committee and continues to contribute to the development
of the NICE Guide to the Methods of Technology Appraisal. He has contributed in
a number of ways to recent policy debates such as pharmaceutical pricing and
innovation. His research interests span the methods of economic evaluation,
particularly decision analytic modelling, characterising uncertainty and value
of information analysis.
Greg L. Stoddart, PhD is Professor Emeritus at McMaster University in Hamilton, Canada,
where he has been a member of the Department of Clinical Epidemiology and
Biostatistics, the Centre for Health Economics and Policy Analysis, the Program
in Policy Decision-Making, and the Department of Economics. In addition to his
work on economic evaluation methods, he has authored or edited numerous books,
monographs and articles on health care financing, utilization analysis, health
human resources, and population health. He was the Founding Coordinator of the
Centre for Health Economics and Policy Analysis, and one of the founders of the
Population Health Program of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research. He
has consulted widely for Canadian provincial and federal governments and the
World Health Organization.
George W. Torrance, PhD, Professor Emeritus, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada, is one
of the founding fathers of the field of economic evaluation in health care. His
numerous publications include both contributions to theory and methods, some of
which he has pioneered, and applications in many different clinical areas. He
co-authored the original guidelines for the economic evaluation of health care
treatments and programmes for Canada (1994) and for the U.S. Public Health
Service (1996). For his pioneering work in the field, Dr. Torrance has received
lifetime achievement awards from three international scientific societies: the
Society for Medical Decision Making, the International Society of Quality of
Life Research, and the International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes
Research. He has been inducted into the McMaster University Health Science's
Community of Distinction. |