Abstract
BackgroundEfficiency and equity are both important policy objectives in resource allocation. The discipline of health economics has traditionally focused on maximising efficiency, however addressing inequities in health also requires consideration. Methods to incorporate equity within economic evaluation techniques range from qualitative judgements to quantitative outcomes-based equity weights. Yet, due to definitional uncertainties and other inherent limitations, no method has been universally adopted to date. This paper proposes an alternative cost-based equity weight for use in the economic evaluation of interventions delivered from primary health care services.MethodsEquity is defined in terms of 'access' to health services, with the vertical equity objective to achieve 'equitable access for unequal need'. Using the Australian Indigenous population as an illustrative case study, the magnitude of the equity weight is constructed using the ratio of the costs of providing specific interventions via Indigenous primary health care services compared with the costs of the same interventions delivered via mainstream services. Applying this weight to the costs of subsequent interventions deflates the costs of provision via Indigenous health services, and thus makes comparisons with mainstream more equitable when applied during economic evaluation.ResultsBased on achieving 'equitable access', existing measures of health inequity are suitable for establishing 'need', however the magnitude of health inequity is not necessarily proportional to the magnitude of resources required to redress it. Rather, equitable access may be better measured using appropriate methods of health service delivery for the target group. 'Equity of access' also suggests a focus on the processes of providing equitable health care rather than on outcomes, and therefore supports application of equity weights to the cost side rather than the outcomes side of the economic equation.ConclusionCost-based weights have the potential to provide a pragmatic method of equity weight construction which is both understandable to policy makers and sensitive to the needs of target groups. It could improve the evidence base for resource allocation decisions, and be generalised to other disadvantaged groups who share similar concepts of equity. Development of this decision-making tool represents a potentially important avenue for further health economics research.
Highlights
Efficiency and equity are both important policy objectives in resource allocation
Specifying equity in terms of 'access' to health services, a cost-side equity weight for use in the economic evaluation of primary health care programs is proposed, which we suggest overcomes some of the limitations of the other techniques
The expanding role of economics is illustrated by the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) in Australia, whereby pharmaceuticals must show evidence of cost-effectiveness prior to being eligible for public subsidy [75]
Summary
Efficiency and equity are both important policy objectives in resource allocation. The discipline of health economics has traditionally focused on maximising efficiency, addressing inequities in health requires consideration. Global moves towards greater accountability of health care systems have increased the role of health economics and measures of efficiency in guiding resource allocation decisions. At the same time addressing the health needs of the whole population, inequities in health, remains valued by most societies, and is an important objective for many health system decision-makers. For this reason, there is impetus for economic evaluation, the predominant tool of health economics, to expand its focus from maximising efficiency to incorporate equity concepts [1,2,3,4,5,6]. Dissonance in opinion is largely driven by the normative nature of equity, and uncertainty in its precise specification, together with the difficulty in finding practical means for its measurement
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