Resource allocation and economic evaluation in Australia’s healthcare system
Abdolvahab Baghbanian A B C D , Ian Hughes B and Freidoon A. Khavarpour BA Health Promotion Research Centre, Faculty of Health, Zahedan University of Medical Sciences, Mashahir Square, Zahedan, 98169-13396, Iran.
B Faculty of Health Sciences, The University of Sydney, Cumberland Campus, PO Box 170, Lidcombe NSW 2141 Australia. Email: ian.hughes@sydney.edu.au; freidoon@tpgi.com.au
C Menzies Centre for Health Policy, Victor Coppleson Building (D02), The University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
D Corresponding author. Email: abag2253@uni.sydney.edu.au
Australian Health Review 35(3) 278-283 https://doi.org/10.1071/AH10890
Submitted: 21 February 2010 Accepted: 4 November 2010 Published: 25 August 2011
Abstract
Objective. To explore dimensions and varieties of economic evaluations that healthcare decision-makers do or do not use.
Design. Web-based survey.
Setting and participants. A purposive sample of Australian healthcare decision-makers was recruited by direct invitation through email. All were invited to complete an online questionnaire derived from the EUROMET 2004 survey.
Results. A total of 91 questionnaires were analysed. Almost all participants were involved in financial resource allocations. Most commonly, participants based their decisions on patient needs, effectiveness of interventions, cost of interventions or overall budgetary effect, and policy directives. Evidence from cost-effectiveness analysis was used by half of the participants. Timing, ethical issues and lack of knowledge about economic evaluation were the most significant barriers to the use of economic evaluations in resource allocation decisions. Most participants reported being moderately to very familiar with the cost-effectiveness analysis. There was a general impression that evidence from economic evaluations should play a larger role in the future.
Conclusions. Evidence from health economic evaluations may provide valuable information in some decisions; however, at present, it is not central to many decisions. The study suggests that, for economic evaluation to be helpful in real-life policy decisions, it has to be placed into context – a context which is complex, political and often resistant to voluntary change.
What is known about the topic? There are increasing calls for the use of evidence from formal economic evaluations to improve the quality of healthcare decision making; however, it is widely acknowledged that such evidence, as presently constituted, is underused in its influence on allocation decisions.
What does this paper add? This study highlights that resource allocation decisions cannot be purely based on the use of technical, economic data or systematic evidence-based reviews. In order to exploit the full potential value of economic evaluations, researchers need to make better sense of decision contexts at specific times and places.
What are the implications for practitioners? The study has the potential to expand researchers and policy-makers’ understanding of the limited use of economic evaluation in decision-making. It produces evidence that decision-making in Australia’s healthcare system is not or cannot be a fully rational bounded process. Economic evaluation is used in some contexts, where information is accurate, complete and available.
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