HEALTH ECONOMICS 4/5/17 Flashcards
What is economics?
the study of choices made by individuals and societies in terms of alternative uses of resources which are employed to satisfied wants
What are the 3 key concepts in economics?
- opportunity cost
- efficiency
- marginal analysis
What is opportunity cost?
- the value of something when a particular course of action is chosen
e. g. opportunity cost of taking a holiday this year instead of replacing your car - should aim to minimise
what are quality adjusted life years (QALYS)?
- a measure of the output of health care that can measure all types of health effect
- different from health related quality of life
- include preferences that allow value of the health condition of interest
What is economic evaluation?
a comparison of two or more alternative courses of action in terms of their cost and their outcomes
When do we use economic evaluation? (2)
- to ensure the value of the outputs from an activity is greater than the value of the resources consumed by the activity
- to provide information about how much it costs per unit of health gain to choose one course of action over another
What is efficiency?
maximising the benefit for the resources used
how is economic efficiency achieved?
when resources are allocated between activities in such a way as to maximise benefit
What is technical efficiency?
how best to meet a given objective
e.g. organising patient follow up clinics via virtual clinics to maximise numbers seen
what is allocative efficiency?
is an activity worthwhile
- is a follow up necessary, who needs it?
What is marginal analysis?
involves comparing the benefit from that next step which is called Marginal benefit with the cost of taking the next step which is called marginal cost
What does the three types of economic evaluation most frequently used depend on?
the outcome/s of interest
When do you do a cost effectiveness analysis?
when we want to compare alternatives with in a condition
e.g. changes in blood pressure
What do we use to compare across conditions? (3)
- cost effectiveness analysis
- cost utility analysis
- cost benefit analysis
What does cost effectiveness analysis calculate?
the (expected) cost per additional unit of health produced by a new intervention compared to current practice
= also called incremental cost effectiveness ratio (ICER)