Objectives: To evaluate the characteristics, methods, and results
of the Dutch Investigative Medicine Program
(“ontwikkelingsgeneeskunde”) in policy and health care.
Methods: Project database analyses of the initial 9 years of the
program; description of characteristics, methods, and effects of the program.
Results: By the end of 1997, 53 projects had been completed,
including implementation in health care policy. In 20 of 53 cases the program
worked as an instrument to prevent the introduction of ineffective,
inefficient, or even harmful medical interventions. In most other cases the
program assisted with proper placement or appropriate application of new
technologies. Apart from new or emerging technologies, already existing
technologies are evaluated.
Conclusion: The Dutch Investigative Medicine Program
(“ontwikkelingsgeneeskunde”) of the Sickness Funds Council is an
effective collaboration of health care providers, medical science, health
economics, and a regulatory body in empirical technology assessment. It is
also an example not only of a substantial contribution of technology
assessment to decision making in practice and policy but also of a means of
regulation of health care by the very activity of technology assessment
itself. It appears that the program has evolved into an instrument to
rationalize health care and health care policy, although some further possible
improvements are identified.