Outcome Measurement in Economic Evaluations of Public Health Interventions: a Role for the Capability Approach?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodological Issues in the Economic Evaluation of Public Health Interventions
- – Measuring benefit, the use of quality adjusted life years (QALYs) (and EQ-5D) and the possible need for evaluations to have more than one outcome measure;
- – Public versus individual, the role of individual choice in population based interventions, and how to account for any resulting externalities;
- – Equity versus efficiency, public health programmes frequently target health inequalities, such that the issue of weighting outcomes may need to be addressed together with other distributional concerns;
- – Perspective, in the NICE Reference Case [14] the perspective for public health evaluations has been broadened to include the public sector, this may lead to inconsistencies when making comparisons with clinical interventions;
- – Extrapolation, what is the appropriate time horizon and how meaningful will such extrapolations be in the absence of robust evidence;
- – Quality of evidence, the evidence base is weaker in public health, and controlled trials are often impossible;
- – Cost effectiveness threshold, should the same threshold be applied to both clinical and public health interventions.
- – Attribution of outcomes, how best to obtain true estimates of effect, what can the existing literature offer by way of evidence, how can primary research generate quality evidence, and what is the appropriate time frame within which to measure success;
- – Measuring and valuing outcomes, what can be measured versus what should be measured, the need for a more generic measure of wellbeing, and sector-specific generic measures of outcome, as well as greater consideration for alternative evaluation approaches;
- – Intersectoral costs and consequences, quantifying the intersectoral impacts of public health interventions, assessment of a general equilibrium approach to the evaluation of public health interventions;
- – Equity considerations, a need for heath inequality impact assessment and research on equity weighting.
3. Outcome Measurement in Economic Evaluation
4. The Capability Approach
4.1. The Application of the Approach to Health Economics—Theoretical Literature
- direct estimation and valuation of capability sets;
- ‘merging’ preference-based measurements, such as willingness to pay, with capabilities;
- re-interpreting the QALY approach.
4.2. The Application of the Approach to (Health) Economics—Empirical Literature
4.3. Outstanding Issues With Regard to Operationalising the Approach for Use in Economic Evaluations
5. Conclusion
Acknowledgments
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Lorgelly, P.K.; Lawson, K.D.; Fenwick, E.A.L.; Briggs, A.H. Outcome Measurement in Economic Evaluations of Public Health Interventions: a Role for the Capability Approach? Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2010, 7, 2274-2289. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph7052274
Lorgelly PK, Lawson KD, Fenwick EAL, Briggs AH. Outcome Measurement in Economic Evaluations of Public Health Interventions: a Role for the Capability Approach? International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2010; 7(5):2274-2289. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph7052274
Chicago/Turabian StyleLorgelly, Paula K., Kenny D. Lawson, Elisabeth A.L. Fenwick, and Andrew H. Briggs. 2010. "Outcome Measurement in Economic Evaluations of Public Health Interventions: a Role for the Capability Approach?" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 7, no. 5: 2274-2289. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph7052274