Are pricing and reimbursement decision-making criteria aligned with public preferences regarding allocation principles in the Polish healthcare sector?

2014 ◽  
Vol 14 (5) ◽  
pp. 751-762 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katarzyna Kolasa
Author(s):  
Gereltuya Dorj ◽  
Bruce Sunderland ◽  
Tsetsegmaa Sanjjav ◽  
Gantuya Dorj ◽  
Byambatsogt Gendenragchaa

Folia Medica ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 55 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 80-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
Georgi G. Iskrov ◽  
Ralitsa D. Raycheva ◽  
Rumen S. Stefanov

ABSTRACT OBJECTIVE: This article’s objective is to critically assess the Bulgarian legislation on health technology assessment (HTA). It analyses how innovative therapies and orphan drugs in particular would respond to the regulators’ decision-making criteria for reimbursement. MATERIALS AND МETHODS: The study features critical analysis of current decision-making criteria for drug reimbursement in Bulgaria, as well as hypothetical scenario planning for orphan medicinal products. RESULTS: The approval for inclusion into the Positive Drug List (PDL) (which is a must for reimbursement) has been reorganised into an assessment scoring system with decisionmaking criteria (presence of therapeutic alternative, clinical effectiveness, safety, pharmacoeconomics and societal value) divided into weighted indicators. An explicit threshold has been set - a medicinal product must score 60 points at least to be included in PDL. Under the currently defined reimbursement decision-making criteria a hypothetical middle- of-the-road scenario planning shows that an orphan drug would score 20 points for therapeutic alternative, 28 for clinical effectiveness and 12 for safety. It would take no points for pharmacoeconomics and societal value. This leaves the orphan drugs with a total score of 60 points, making the final outcome of real-life assessment and decision-making heavily dependent on small fluctuations. CONCLUSIONS: The current reimbursement decision-making framework in Bulgaria seems to be generalised and not sufficiently transparent. It is unable to precisely assess innovative health technologies. The availability of a therapeutic alternative emerges as a key reimbursement decision-making criterion for orphan drugs, as these innovative products nominally provide the first medicinal therapy alternative to rare diseases.


2012 ◽  
Vol 15 (7) ◽  
pp. A621-A622
Author(s):  
S. Tan ◽  
H. Dummett ◽  
S. Kirpekar ◽  
Q. Guan ◽  
V.L. Priest

Author(s):  
Igor Klimenko ◽  
A. Ivlev

The study carried out in this work made it possible to expand the rank scale for a priori assessment of the chosen strategy in terms of increasing the sensitivity of assessing the caution / negligence ratio using risky, as well as classical decision-making criteria under conditions of statistical uncertainty.


2015 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 216-239
Author(s):  
Olga Torres-Hostench ◽  
Ramon Piqué Huerta ◽  
Pilar Cid Leal

EULAs (End-User License Agreements) present specific translation challenges, ones contingent on how the EULAs will be used. In a recent study, the decisions made by forty-seven translation students while translating a EULA were observed and analyzed. The aim of the study was threefold: (1) to observe the criteria used for decision-making when translating a EULA; (2) to observe how decision-making criteria changed after using specific resources designed for translating EULAs (lawcalisation.com); and (3) to evaluate the overall usefulness of the lawcalisation.com resource. Results suggest that by providing translators with a single website portal of specific resources, they were able not only to find the equivalents they needed but also to consult the relevant legal and translation information that ultimately helped them develop more solid criteria for translation decision-making. Decisions were guided by principles of law applicability, terminology, legislation, and translation studies Skopos theories.


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