scholarly journals Making HPV vaccines efficient: Cost-Effectiveness Analysis and the Economic Assemblage of Healthcare in Colombia

2017 ◽  
pp. 2-18
Author(s):  
Oscar Javier Maldonado Castañeda

Cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) is a strategy of calculation whose main objective is to compare for making decisions about the best, the most efficient solution (costs vs. benefits) to a particular problem. Cost-effectiveness analysis not only provides a framework to compare healthcare interventions which in practice seem incommensurable; it also performs a set of assumptions regarding the nature of healthcare and the behaviour of individuals. This article analyses the role of CEA as a device to produce value in the introduction of HPV vaccines in Colombia. In the different institutional pathways and decision-making scenarios cost-effectiveness has been the key issue that justified the inclusions and the exclusions that such technology entails. Cost-effectiveness has justified the definition of girls as the population target and the exclusion of boys from risks and benefits of this technology. Moreover, cost-effectiveness analysis has been a key instrument in the sexualising and de-sexualising of cervical cancer and HPV vaccines through the rationalisation of economic benefits.

Author(s):  
Ciaran N. Kohli-Lynch ◽  
Andrew H. Briggs

Cost-effectiveness analysis is conducted with the aim of maximizing population-level health outcomes given an exogenously determined budget constraint. Considerable health economic benefits can be achieved by reflecting heterogeneity in cost-effectiveness studies and implementing interventions based on this analysis. The following article describes forms of subgroup and heterogeneity in patient populations. It further discusses traditional decision rules employed in cost-effectiveness analysis and shows how these can be adapted to account for heterogeneity. This article discusses the theoretical basis for reflecting heterogeneity in cost-effectiveness analysis and methodology that can be employed to conduct such analysis. Reflecting heterogeneity in cost-effectiveness analysis allows decision-makers to define limited use criteria for treatments with a fixed price. This ensures that only those patients who are cost-effective to treat receive an intervention. Moreover, when price is not fixed, reflecting heterogeneity in cost-effectiveness analysis allows decision-makers to signal demand for healthcare interventions and ensure that payers achieve welfare gains when investing in health.


2015 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. 245-249 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth A. Freedberg ◽  
Cristina Possas ◽  
Steven Deeks ◽  
AnnaLaura Ross ◽  
Katherine L. Rosettie ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 212 (1) ◽  
pp. S171-S172
Author(s):  
Francis Hacker ◽  
Emily Griffin ◽  
Brian Shaffer ◽  
Aaron Caughey

2020 ◽  
Vol 40 (12) ◽  
pp. 1517-1524
Author(s):  
Francis M Hacker ◽  
Alyssa R Hersh ◽  
Brian L Shaffer ◽  
Aaron B Caughey

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