Author:
Corlis Joseph,Zhu Jinyi,Macul Hélder,Tiberi Orrin,Boothe Makini A. S.,Resch Stephen C.
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) is a standard tool for evaluating health programs and informing decisions about resource allocation and prioritization. Most CEAs evaluating health interventions in low- and middle-income countries adopt a health sector perspective, accounting for resources funded by international donors and country governments, while often excluding out-of-pocket expenditures and time costs borne by program beneficiaries. Even when patients’ costs are included, a companion analysis focused on the patient perspective is rarely performed. We view this as a missed opportunity.
Methods
We developed methods for assessing intervention affordability and evaluating whether optimal interventions from the health sector perspective also represent efficient and affordable options for patients. We mapped the five different patterns that a comparison of the perspective results can yield into a practical framework, and we provided guidance for researchers and decision-makers on how to use results from multiple perspectives. To illustrate the methodology, we conducted a CEA of six HIV treatment delivery models in Mozambique. We conducted a Monte Carlo microsimulation with probabilistic sensitivity analysis from both patient and health sector perspectives, generating incremental cost-effectiveness ratios for the treatment approaches. We also calculated annualized patient costs for the treatment approaches, comparing the costs with an affordability threshold. We then compared the cost-effectiveness and affordability results from the two perspectives using the framework we developed.
Results
In this case, the two perspectives did not produce a shared optimal approach for HIV treatment at the willingness-to-pay threshold of 0.3 × Mozambique’s annual GDP per capita per DALY averted. However, the clinical 6-month antiretroviral drug distribution strategy, which is optimal from the health sector perspective, is efficient and affordable from the patient perspective. All treatment approaches, except clinical 1-month distributions of antiretroviral drugs which were standard before Covid-19, had an annual cost to patients less than the country’s annual average for out-of-pocket health expenditures.
Conclusion
Including a patient perspective in CEAs and explicitly considering affordability offers decision-makers additional insights either by confirming that the optimal strategy from the health sector perspective is also efficient and affordable from the patient perspective or by identifying incongruencies in value or affordability that could affect patient participation.
Funder
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference83 articles.
1. Banke-Thomas A, Madaj B, Kumar S, Amehl C, van den Broek N. Assessing value-for-money in maternal and newborn health. BMJ Glob Health. 2017. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2017-000310.
2. Brown E, Tanner J. Integrating value for money and impact evaluations issues, institutions, and opportunities. Washington: World Bank; 2019.
3. Neumann P, Sanders G, Basu A, Brock D, Feeny D, Krahn M, et al. Recommendations on perspectives for the reference case. In: Neumann P, Sanders G, Russell LB, Siegel J, Ganiats TG, editors., et al., Cost-effectiveness in health and medicine. Oxford: Oxford Scholarship; 2016.
4. Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria. Value for Money Technical Brief. 2019. 35 p. https://www.theglobalfund.org/media/8596/core_valueformoney_technicalbrief_en.pdf. Accessed 2 Feb 2021.
5. Santatiwongchai B, Chantarastapornchit V, Wilkinson T, Thiboonboon K, Rattanavipapong W, Walker DG, et al. Methodological variation in economic evaluations conducted in low- and middle-income countries: information for reference case development. PLoS ONE. 2015. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0123853.