如何评估疫苗的全部经济价值?从过去到现在,为未来吸取教训。

Q2 Medicine
Journal of market access & health policy Pub Date : 2020-01-31 eCollection Date: 2020-01-01 DOI:10.1080/20016689.2020.1719588
Baudouin Standaert, Christophe Sauboin, Rodrigo DeAntonio, Alen Marijam, Jorge Gomez, Lijoy Varghese, Sharon Zhang
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引用次数: 12

摘要

背景:成本-效果分析(CEA)是当今在发达医疗保健系统中以一种新治疗替代一种治疗以提高效率的背景下最常用的经济分析方法。当地医疗保健决策者经常要求CEA给予报销。然而,与治疗相比,新的预防性干预措施,如新疫苗,可能在医疗保健内外带来更广泛的益处。这些额外的好处包括间接临床影响的外部性、特定医疗保健资源的重新分配、提高护理质量、提高生产力、更好的疾病控制、更好的财政收入等。但是这些影响有时很难整合成一个有意义的CEA结果。它们可能表现为特定利益相关者的特定利益,而不是医疗保健领域的利益相关者。目标:基于对疫苗经济评估应用的历史观点,我们的目标是盘点哪些人曾经/现在有兴趣了解疫苗的经济价值,这些不同的利益攸关方可能从他们的角度看到哪些好处,以及我们过去/现在如何能够衡量这些好处并做好报告。结果:历史观点揭示了50多年前开始时对疫苗经济评估的有限兴趣,这与通过优化练习在新行业中寻求更高效率的评估相当。今天,我们面对的是一大批不同的利益相关者(n= 16)。他们对疫苗效益的许多不同方面有自己的特殊兴趣,其中一些在传统的经济分析中是众所周知的(n=9),但大多数结果是隐藏的,没有得到充分的评估和报告(n=26)。同时,我们发现已经探索了许多不同的评估方法来促进效益的测量和报告(n=18)。结论:因此,我们建议在未来新疫苗的经济评价中,在利益相关者类型选择、每个利益相关者感兴趣的结果度量和正确的应用方法这三个实体之间找到正确的组合。我们在文章的最后给出了一些例子来说明这种方法是如何成功的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

How to assess for the full economic value of vaccines? From past to present, drawing lessons for the future.

How to assess for the full economic value of vaccines? From past to present, drawing lessons for the future.

How to assess for the full economic value of vaccines? From past to present, drawing lessons for the future.

How to assess for the full economic value of vaccines? From past to present, drawing lessons for the future.

Background:Cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) is the economic analysis method most commonly applied today in the context of replacing one treatment with a new one in a developed healthcare system to improve efficiency. CEA is often requested by local healthcare decision-makers to grant reimbursement. New preventative interventions, such as new vaccines, may however have much wider benefits inside and outside healthcare, when compared with treatment. These additional benefits include externalities on indirect clinical impact, reallocation of specific healthcare resources, improved quality of care, better productivity, better disease control, better fiscal revenues, and others. But these effects are sometimes difficult to integrate into a meaningful CEA result. They may appear as specific benefits for specific stakeholders, other than the stakeholders in healthcare. Objective: Based on a historical view about the application of economic assessments for vaccines our objective has been to make the inventory of who was/is interested in knowing the economic value of vaccines, in what those different stakeholders are likely to see the benefit from their perspective and how  were/are we able to measure those benefits and to report them well. Results: The historical view disclosed a limited interest in the economic assessment of vaccines at start, more than 50 years ago, that was comparable to the assessment of looking for more efficiency in new industries through optimization exercises. Today, we are exposed to a very rich panoply of different stakeholders (n= 16). They have their specific interest in many different facets of the vaccine benefit of which some are well known in the conventional economic analysis (n=9), but most outcomes are hidden and not enough evaluated and reported (n=26). Meanwhile we discovered that many different methods of evaluation have been explored to facilitate the measurement and reporting of the benefits (n=18). Conclusion: Our recommendation for future economic evaluations of new vaccines is therefore to find the right combination among the three entities of stakeholder type selection, outcome measure of interest for each stakeholder, and the right method to apply. We present at the end examples that illustrate how successful this approach can be.

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