Health economics Flashcards

1
Q

what are the 4 principles of health economics?

A
  1. Scarcity- a finite limit to resources
  2. Economic efficiency- achieved when resources are allowed in a way to max. benefit
  3. Economic evaluation- the assessment of efficiency, cost vs benefits of heath care interventions
  4. Equity- fairness or justice in the distribution of costs and benefits
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2
Q

how to measure health benefit?

A

change in something measured in ‘natural units’ i.e. BP, pain score, walking distance, cholesterol level

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3
Q

what is a QALY?

A

Quality Adjusted Life Year

combines length of life (years) with quality of life (measured in utility: 0-1)

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4
Q

what is 1 QALY?

A

1 year of perfect health or 2 years in half perfect health

allows comparison across diseases

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5
Q

what is monetary value?

A

willingness to pay for health benefit

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6
Q

4 types of economic evaluation?

A
  1. Cost-effectiveness analysis
  2. Cost- utility analysis
  3. Cost-benefit analysis
  4. Cost-minimalization analysis
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7
Q

which type of economic evaluation is used by NICE and why?

A

cost-utility analysis

outcomes are in QALY and cost in monetary value

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8
Q

what is cost-effectiveness analysis?

A

outcomes measured in natural units

costs measured in monetary value

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9
Q

what is cost-benefit analysis?

A

both costs and outcomes measured in monetary units e.g. how much money does screening save for on breast cancer treatment

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10
Q

what is cost minimalization analysis?

A

outcomes known to be equal

different costs

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11
Q

what is the cost-effectiveness plane from a cost-utility analysis?

A

a 4 way grid, used to compare 2 interventions/treatments
x axis= QALY
y axis= incremental cost
dominant treatment means most effective for the least cost

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12
Q

how to work out incremental cost effectiveness ratio (ICER)?

A

differences in costs/ differences in benefits

e.g. (cost intervention A- cost intervention B)/ (benefit A- benefit B)

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13
Q

if an existing drug costs £10,000 with 5 QALYs
and a new drug costs £25,000 with 6 QALYs
what is the ICER?

A

(25000-10000)/ (6-5) = 5000

Means £5000 per QALY gained

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14
Q

what do NICE value 1 QALY at?

A

£20000
anything over isn’t funded unless case-by-case basis
ICER can be increased as people get older as they are seen to be worth more

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15
Q

a current treatment costs £2000 over the remaining life time of a typical patient which is 10 years
how many QALYs?

a new tx costs £22000, extends life to 11 years and increases utility to 0.75
how many QALYs?

should the new treatment be funded?

A

Old QALYs= 0.7 x 10= 7

New QALYs= 0.75 x 11= 8.25

the difference means the new treatment costs £20000 for a increase in 1.25 QALY

ISER= 22000-2000/ 8.25-7
= 16000

= £16000 for 1 QALY

therefore it is likely to be funded by NICE as it costs less than £20000 for 1 QALY

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