Measurement of Outcomes and Costs in Economic Analysis Flashcards

1
Q

What assumption is made in economic evaluation?

A
  • that distribution does not matter
  • just as good to give 50 years of good QoL to one person as to give 10 ears to 5
  • we are interested in the maximum total benefit from the budget
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2
Q

What does the costs and outcomes we measure depend on?

A
Depends of the perspective of our analysis 
- health service 
- public sector 
- patient 
- society 
Type of economic evaluation 
- CEA or CUA
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3
Q

What kind of clinical outcomes can we measure?

A
  • measured in natural units
  • proxy outcomes lead to further outcomes e.g. cancer detected or change in cholesterol levels
  • condition-specific measures e.g. Roland Morris quesionnaire for back pain or CAT (COPD assessment test)
  • generic measure e.g. life years gained
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4
Q

Give examples of short and long term outcomes in hypertension

A
short= reduced in blood pressure 
long = number of strokes/MIs, overall number of CV events, number of deaths
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5
Q

What are the advantages of clinical outcomes?

A
  • often measured as part of clinical study

- easily understood/transparent to clinicians/decisino makers

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6
Q

What are the limitations of clinical outcomes?

A
  • lack of comparability across different disease areas
  • what does £ per unit reduction in mmHg actually mean?
  • what if we have more than one outcome?
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7
Q

How are QALY’s calculated?
What does 1 mean?
What does 0 mean?

A
  • total(length of life x QoL)
    1 = perfect health
    0 = death
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8
Q

Where is the information for QALYs collected from?

A
  • life years: life tables and treasure as well as deaths recorded in stay
    Quality of life
  • value judgement
  • questionnaires
  • direct measurements from health state description
  • published values in literature
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9
Q

What questionnaire is used to assess quality of life?
What are the 5 dimensions of it?
How are the questions ranked

A
Euro-QoL EQ-5D
- mobility
- self care
- usual activities
- pain/discomfort
- anxiety/depression 
Ranked 1-3
e.g. 
1. i have no problems walking about 
2. i have some problems walking about 
3. i am confined to bed
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10
Q

What are the advantages of using QALYs?

A
  • takes into account impact on quality and quantity of life
  • common unit of measure that can be used across disease areas
  • convenient tools for measurement e.g. EQ-5D
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11
Q

How is QALYs gained calculated

A

QALYs with treatment - QALYs without treatment

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12
Q

So are we measuring utility?

A

QALYs used in cost utility analysis but economic definition of utility is ‘level of satisfaction from goods or services’

  • utility in cost-utility analysis is purely about maximisation of health
  • this is therefore not an economic definition
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13
Q

What are the concerns about QALYs?

A
  • all QUALYs are valued the same
  • insensitivity of questionnaires
  • end of life treatments e.g. a good 6 months extra
  • discrimination
  • broader patient benefits
  • ## family/carer benefits
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14
Q

What patient benefits are not captured by QALYs?

A
  • control/empowerment
  • reassurance
  • knowledge
  • satisfaction with caer
  • capability
  • family/carer QoL
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15
Q

What are the direct and indirect costs of an intervention?

A

Direct cost
- health and social services resource use e.g. inpatient, outpatient, tests, drugs
indirect cost
- non-health services resource use e.g. patient transportation, informal care
Indirect cost
- wider cost implications to society e.g. lost production

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16
Q

Give examples of health and social service incurred costs

A

Primary care costs = Gp and practice nurse visits, other healthcare professionals
Secondary care costs = A&E attendance, outpatients, inpatient stays, surgery, tests and investigations
Social Services = nursing home care, home help, home adaptations

17
Q

Give examples of patient and carer incurred costs

A
  • cost of time and transport for healthcare visits
  • over the counter medicine and appliances
  • private healthcare
  • paid carers
  • informal carer time
18
Q

Give examples of indirect costs

Are these required for UK analyses?

A

Costs due to lost production
- unable to work due to death or disability
- time for work due to illness
- reduced productivity
Not required for UK analyses
Part of ‘reference case’ for other countries e.g. netherlands