No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
OP125 How Can Health Technology Assessment Evolve To Better Consider Benefits For Patients, Their Families, And Carers?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 December 2023
Abstract
In Australia, technical guidelines for the health technology assessment (HTA) of medical technologies do not formally include broader societal benefits in the base case economic evaluation; they are considered supplementary analyses. If what matters to patients is relevant and valuable, then why shouldn’t these broader benefits play a more important role? This presentation will consider the challenges and opportunities for HTA guidelines to change to allow this, and the broader implications for decision makers.
A targeted literature review was undertaken to assess whether economic evaluation methods and their application in HTA are well positioned to assess what matters to patients. Practical challenges for this will be considered, particularly from the perspective of decision makers having a full understanding of broader societal benefits.
Preliminary findings from the literature review suggested that taking a broader societal perspective in economic evaluations used in HTA has the potential to enable more informed decisions for policy makers. However, there are practical considerations regarding consistent approaches to assessing broader societal and patient benefits.
For decision makers to be fully informed on the impact of their decisions beyond healthcare budgets alone, explicit consideration of a societal perspective is necessary. However, for decisions to be equitable across different patient groups, there must be consistency in methodological approaches. Fixing this current limitation should not prevent HTA from giving what matters to patients a central role now, and refining methods on an ongoing basis.
- Type
- Oral Presentations
- Information
- International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care , Volume 39 , Special Issue S1: Abstracts from the HTAi 2023 Meeting in Adelaide, Australia , December 2023 , pp. S35 - S36
- Copyright
- © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press