Evid Based Spine Care J 2013; 04(01): 002-005
DOI: 10.1055/s-0033-1341594
Science in Spine
Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Economic Studies Part 2: Evaluating the Quality

Nora B. Henrikson
1   Spectrum Research, Inc, Tacoma, Washington, United States
,
Andrea C. Skelly
1   Spectrum Research, Inc, Tacoma, Washington, United States
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Publikationsdatum:
01. Mai 2013 (online)

Introduction

In the first article in this series (EBSJ, volume 3, issue 4), we described some basic terminologies related to health economic studies. In this second and final article, we describe

  • available tools for evaluating the quality of economic studies and

  • aspects of a high-quality economic study.

As with clinical studies, health economic studies vary in scope and quality. Their usefulness for decision and policy making is linked to their methodological rigor, accuracy, and generalizability. Thus, critical appraisal is important to put the results in the context of study quality.

Economic evaluations identify and compare appropriate alternatives of care, their incremental impact on health outcomes, and their incremental costs. As described in the first part of the series, there are several types of comprehensive medico-economic evaluations.

  • Cost-minimization studies consider the cost differences between alternatives of equal effectiveness. This assumes each alternative is equally effective, which is rarely true.

  • Cost-benefit studies consider both costs and benefits in monetary terms. Expressing benefits in monetary terms is, however, controversial.

  • Cost-effectiveness studies consider differences in costs and differences in effectiveness, but effectiveness is measured variably between studies. For comparisons involving the same disease, condition, or health state, this may be the most meaningful type of evaluation. It is less helpful for comparing studies involving different diseases.

  • Cost-utility studies consider differences in costs and outcomes for quality-adjusted survival, most often using the quality-adjusted life year (QALY). Cost-utility studies have the advantage of providing an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) expressed as “cost per quality-adjusted life year” (cost per QALY) that eases comparison across multiple studies. This approach incorporates assumptions regarding how each alternative impacts patient's quality of life.

Each employs different methodologies, potentially complicating critical appraisal, but some common criteria can be assessed across studies. No standard, universally accepted method of critical appraisal of economic analyses is currently in use. Across the available methods, there is agreement on several points of methodological quality.[1]

 
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