L11 Flashcards

1
Q

Why is economic evaluation of HC important?

A

to inform decision-making about the allocation of scarce resources and make sure resources are being used efficiently and equitably

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2
Q

What is welfarism?

A

Utility maximising allocation of resources (see notes? how does this link to the following definitions?)

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3
Q

What is individualism?

A

Consumer choice theory: the only relevant info. in making social choices is the view of individuals

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4
Q

What is consequentialism?

A

We are concerned with outcomes of choices rather than processes

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5
Q

What is the Pareto principle?

A

A desirable allocation of resources should at least satisfy the idea that no one can be made better off without making someone else worse off

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6
Q

Why is the pareto principle not the be all and end all of welfarism?

A

Is very easily met! tells us nothing about how equitable an allocation is tf doesn’t help us find optimal social welfare tf not a very useful concept in Health econ.

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7
Q

What was Kalder’s (1939) compensation principle?

A

A policy is beneficial if those gaining from the move could potentially compensate those who lose

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8
Q

Explain how Kalder’s (1939) principle may be applied?

A

Add up value of gains and losses - if sums to a positive value then potential pareto improvement, tf should be implemented, and then (may) choose to compensate those who lose out (note: two parts are theoretically seperable; one doesn’t have to compensate - see example in notes)

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9
Q

2 advantages of welfarism?

A

1) only interested in individual’s utility, which sum to make up society tf should be fine!
2) utility of individuals should reflect what they find important

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10
Q

Disadvantage of welfarism and implication of it?

A

Money must be used as an indicator of utility (eg. utility of health/life) therefore puts a monetary value on HC concepts like life and death; many people dislike this idea

Therefore HC uses an extra-welfarism approach

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11
Q

Theoretical characteristics of extra-welfarism? (3)

A

1) Use of outcomes rather than utility (health focus)
2) Sources of valuation other than just the affected individuals (population-based - how much do non-affected people value the intervention)
3) Permits interpersonal comparisons of well-being

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12
Q

What does the ‘extra’ refer to?

A

Health rather than utility

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13
Q

Why do welfarists criticise EWism?

A

Believe that health -> utility tf unnecessary approach

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14
Q

Why do EWists argue in favour of EWism?

A

Argue that EWism makes it harder to distinguish between equity and efficiency - in welfarism it is too easy to compensate poor health with health from a different source, EWism is not easy to do this (???)

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15
Q

What is economic evaluation?

A

Comparative analysis of alternative courses of actions ITO both costs and consequences

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16
Q

Define opportunity cost?

A

Value of the best forgone alternative when a decision is made

17
Q

5 types of HC analysis?

A

1) CEA (cost-effectiveness analysis)
2) CCA (cost-consequence analysis)
3) CMA (cost-minimisation analysis)
4) CUA (cost-utility analysis)
5) CBA (cost-benefit analysis)

18
Q

Cost-effectiveness analysis: approach? measurement unit types? type of questions it addresses?

A

Extra-welfarist
eg. lives saved/cancers detected - physical/natural unit
Addresses technical efficiency questions

19
Q

2 ways a CEA evaluates its findings?

A

1) Dominance: eg. more units at a lower cost/unit - makes sense!
2) Cost effectiveness ratio (CER): calculates the cost per extra unit of benefit (see slides 8 and 9 example?)

20
Q

ICER = ?

A

Difference in costs/difference in consequences

21
Q

2 advantages of CEA?

A

1) straightforward to calculate

2) appealing to clinicians

22
Q

2 disadvantages of CEA?

A

1) not clear what measure to use if no obvious outcome

2) not informative system for decision-makers/commissioners

23
Q

What is a CCA?

A

Special case of a CEA: it lists all costs and consequences of different choices (basically a ‘first step’) (see slide 1 page 10)

24
Q

Pros of a CCA? (3)

A

1) can see all outcomes
2) natural units
3) Few ‘assumptions’

25
Q

Cons of a CCA? (3)

A

1) no relative importance indicators
2) decision rule requires dominance
3) assumes decision maker capacity

26
Q

What is a CMA?

A

Special type of a CEA: ignores outcome/performance element, only concerned with the LOWEST COST OPTION (dominance decision rule is this)

27
Q

Con of CMA?

A

Too simplistic to assume all interventions have equivalent outcomes!

28
Q

What is approach is a CUA? How are outcomes measured? How are results described?

A

Extra-welfarist
QALYs
Results ITO cost per additional QALY gained

29
Q

What is a QALY?

A

Quality-adjusted life year
Combines life years in a particular state of life
1 QALY is one life year in full health

30
Q

What is the decision rule for a CUA?

A

Dominance or cost-utility ratio

31
Q

When are CUA best used? (3)

A

1) When health-related QofL is most important outcome
2) Interventions that affect both mortality and morbidity
3) Suitable for comparing a wide range of outcomes

32
Q

When not to use a CUA?

A

When existing variable is already available and appropriate and documented

33
Q

2 pros of CUA?

A

1) Combines both length and quality of life into one unit

2) Allows cross-disease comparisons

34
Q

2 cons of CUA?

A

Costly and time-consuming

Dependent on method/scale used

35
Q

What is a CBA? What units does it use? What is its decision rule?

A

Monetary valuation of costs and benefits of a decision to address whether a programme should be implemented
Decision rule: implement if B-C>0 (net benefit)

36
Q

Advantage of CBA over CEA/CUA? Why rarely used in health?

A

Broader scope than CEA/CUA (for example…?)
Not used much in health bc. of difficulties in applying some elements (eg. WTP and DCE)
Also places monetary value health concepts like life tf many dislike it in health! (see table page 13 of lecture notes?)