Title: Costs and Cost Effectiveness
1Costs and Cost Effectiveness
- HINF 371 - Medical Methodologies
- Session 15
2Objective
- To review the relationship between healthcare
costs and practice guidelines - To understand the possible impact of guidelines
with cost assessment
3Context
- Healthcare costs are increasing
- This is no problem if people willing to pay more
- There is a tendency to pass the costs to others
- Patients expect the latest and the best
technologies no matter how expensive, how small
or uncertain the benefit - We will pay no matter what because the costs will
not disappear
4Guidelines and Costs
- A guideline can consider costs and recommend a
practice only if it is cost effective - A guideline would recommend a practice only if
its benefits outweigh its harms
5How to regulate
- Free market for balancing the costs with values
- Insurance causes over consumption
- People consume if they dont pay
- Collectively everyone overconsumes, the result in
the aggregate is not good for anyone. - Collectively the cost people end-up paying for
healthcare exceed the value of what they are
receiving in return - But
- Decisions to be made by consumers
- The value and costs of goods must be known
- They pay the full cost and receive the full
benefit
6What to do?
- Guidelines may contribute linking value to costs,
- They can provide essential information
- They can provide costs
- If costs are excluded from guidelines who will do
it? - Society what is society?
- Practitioners and Patients?
- Or no one?
- If they are included in guidelines
- Safety in numbers
- Standard practice
7Can guidelines contain costs
- Limited information on economic outcomes and
health outcomes - Guidelines are only one cost element Medical
education, Human resources, Facilities planning,
Efficiency of operations, financial and
professional incentives - People still ignore and continue to overconsume
8Patients and to be patients to be asked
- The change of MI next year is 0.005
- The possibility of death decreased from 9 percent
to 8 percent with HINF medication - Insurance for HINF is 50
- The cost of HINF medication is 10,000
9Patients and to be patients to be asked
- Are you willing to pay 50?
- Would you be willing to pay 10,000?
- Are you going to pay 10,000?
- No payment but your premiums will increase next
year, do you want to receive the drug? - Are you willing to pay up front 10,000, in case
you should have a MI?
10Decision steps
- Estimate health outcomes
- Ask patients if the benefits outweigh the harms?
- If no, stop.
- If yes, estimate the cost of intervention
- Is the value higher than the cost?
- If yes, use, recommend and cover
- If no, do not use recommend and cover
- Adhere to decision
11Cost Effectiveness Analysis
- Estimating and valuing the resources used for
interventions against the costs incurred - Cost effectiveness values health effects in
monetary terms and makes it comparable - The true cost of an intervention is its
opportunity cost.
12Decision makers challenge
- Choosing the interventions that produce the most
health for the resources spent. - Comparing alternatives and decide which
interventions, for whom and at what intensity are
the best use of medical resources
13Whose Perspective?
- Societal perspective is appropriate for analyses
that are designed to inform decisions made in the
public interest about the broad allocation of
medical resources - All significant costs and health effects must be
considered, micro costed, based on critical path,
and discounted - A time horizon must be established and a cohort
must be selected - Ratio must include net health benefits and net
costs of two alternatives
14Compared to what?
- Propranolol 51 life years/1M
- Pap smear every 3 years 36
- By-pass surgery 93
- Lovastatin 1
- Influenza vaccine for 65 - 7,750
- CCU for low risk patients 2
- Total hip replacement 165
- Tetanus booster every 10 years - 4
15Compared to what
P vac. No Vac Difference
Costs
Vaccination 12 0 12
Adverse effects 0.01 0 0.01
Treatment 76.41 96.69 -20.28
Total 88.42 96.69 -8.27
Effects
Quality adjusted Days 2,273.26 2,272.05 1.21
16Better Cost effectiveness model
- Structure of model should make sense to experts
- The model should replicate the outcomes
- Models predictions should correspond well with
results of studies used in its construction - To use the model to predict outcomes for a new
program and compare the predictions with
experience under the program