Objective: The purpose of this study is to analyze the perception of
the content of health technology assessment (HTA) among health
professionals applying for a state grant of DKK 10 million.
Methods: A total of 113 applications were received and analyzed. When
conducting the analysis, it was assumed that the applicants' maximum
five-page project description would reflect: a) the applicants'
perception of what an HTA is; b) how the assessment was to be
conducted; and c) what the results were going to be used for.
Results: More than 40% of all applications focused on treatment; in
51% only one or two professional groups were to be involved (thus
interdisciplinarity was questionable); only 22% of the HTA cases
were intended to form the basis for political/administrative decisions;
in general, the HTAs were planned far less comprehensively than was
relevant; 76% of the projects did not include a formal synthesis
phase; 41% intended to use diffusion as the only method for
publication of the HTA result.
Conclusions: The analysis reveals several areas where DIHTA has to
make an effort in order to secure that HTA in fact constitutes a
comprehensive and well-documented basis for decision making. These
areas concern the following topics: multidisciplinarity, the
objective of HTA, comprehensiveness, the synthesis phase, and
publication and utilization of the HTA result.