cost and consequences Flashcards
Costs
are calculated to estimate the resources (or inputs) used to produce a good or service.
opportunity cost
value of the best alternative or one choice over another
fixed vs variable cost
fixed Cost The cost does not vary with the quantity or volume of the output provided in the short run.
variable cost: The cost varies with changes in the output volume
rent, insurance, salaries of permanent staff,
variable costs include raw materials, direct labor electricity consumption
average and marginal costs?
average costs: The total cost of healthcare intervention provided, divided by the total quantity of the intervention
marginal costs:
the change in the total cost of producing one more or one less unit of the output
Cost Categories
1.Direct medical costs
2.Direct nonmedical costs
3.Indirect costs
4.Intangible costs
Other categories (Drummond et al)
a.Healthcare sector costs
b.Costs to other sectors
c.Patient and family costs
d.Productivity costs
Direct Medical Costs and direct non medical costs
direct medical These are the medically related inputs used directly to provide the treatment.
**non med: **Costs that are associated with treatment but are not medical in nature
Pharmaceuticals
▪ Diagnostic tests
▪ Physician & pharmacist visits ▪ Emergency department visits
▪ Hospitalizations
- Transportation
▪ Childcare services
▪ Food and lodging
Indirect Costs and intangible costs
Involve the costs that result from the loss of productivity because of illness or death.
Intangible costs include the costs of pain, suffering, anxiety, or fatigue that occur because of an illness or the treatment of an illness
Incremental cost
It refers to the extra cost required to buy an additional unit of benefit for one therapeutic alternative compared to the other.
Opportunity cost
It refers to the economic benefit that is relinquished while choosing one therapeutic alternative over the other, i.e., Money spent on one resource that cannot be spent for other purposes; the value of the next best use that is forgone.
Healthcare sector costs
Other sector costs
Patient & family costs
Productivity costs
- Include medical resources consumed by healthcare entities, Similar to direct medical costs but do not include direct medical costs paid for by the patient
- Some diseases and their treatment impact other non-healthcare sectors such as housing, homemaker services, and educational services.
- These costs include the patient’s or family’s share of direct medical as well as direct nonmedical costs.
- Similar to indirect costs but has the advantage of not being confused with the accounting term with the same name.Drummond et al. advise against using the term intangible
II. CONSEQUENCES “outcomes”
defined as the effects, outputs, and outcomes of the program or treatment alternative (drug therapy).
Economic outcomes
clinical outcome
humanistic outcome
positive outcome
negative outcome
intermediate coutcome
Economic outcomes: Comparing direct, indirect, and intangible costs with the consequences of
medical treatment alternatives
▪Clinical outcomes: Medical events occur as a result of disease or treatment (e.g., safety and
efficacy endpoint)
Humanistic outcomes:Consequences of disease or treatment on patient function status as physical function, social function, general health and well-being, and life satisfaction
**Positive outcome: **The desired effect of the drug, i.e., the best therapeutic outcomes.
▪ Negative outcomes: Adverse reaction or toxicity of the drug
▪ Intermediate outcomes: It can serve as a proxy for the more relevant final outcome
PERSPECTIVE
Perspective refers to the point of view from which the economic (i.e., PE) analysis is performed
▪ Patient
From patients’ perspective, costs are essentially what they pay for a product or service (the portion not covered by insurance).
▪ Provider
From a healthcare professional or care organization, costs are the actual costs of providing a product or service, regardless of the charge.