Abstract

BackgroundHealth Technology Assessments (HTAs) are used to inform decision-making and their usefulness depends on the quality and relevance of research and specific studies for health-policy decisions. Little is known about the country of origin of studies used for HTAs.ObjectiveTo investigate which countries have made the largest contributions to inform health policy decisions through studies included in HTAs in Germany.MethodsThe country of origin was extracted from all studies included in HTAs of the German Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care, (IQWiG), published from 2/2006 to 9/2010. Studies were ranked according to the total number of studies per country, adjusted for population size, gross domestic product (GDP), and total health expenditure.Results1087 studies were included in 54 HTA reports. Studies were assigned to 45 countries. Most of the studies (27%) originated from the United States (USA), 18% were multinational, followed by 7% from the United Kingdom (UK) and 5% from Germany. Nordic countries led the ranking when adjusting for population size/million (ranks 1-3,6,9/45 countries), GDP/billion US$ (1,2,5,9,14/45), or health expenditure/billion US$ (1,3,5,12,13/45). The relative contribution of the UK was stable in the analyses when adjusted for population size (7/45), GDP (7/45), and health expenditure (9/45), whereas the USA (13, 18, and 30/45) and Germany (17, 19, and 21/45) dropped in the ranking.ConclusionsMore than half of the studies relevant for evidence-informed decision-making in Germany originated from the USA, followed by multinational research and the UK. Only 5% of the studies originated from Germany. According to our findings, there appears to be some discrepancy between the use of globally generated evidence and the contribution to the knowledge pool by individual countries.

Highlights

  • Health Technology Assessment (HTA) is a multidisciplinary field that systematically investigates the clinical efficacy and effectiveness, safety, cost, cost-effectiveness of health care interventions, as well as organizational implications, social consequences, and legal and ethical considerations [1]

  • 1087 studies were included in 54 HTA reports

  • Most of the studies (27%) originated from the United States (USA), 18% were multinational, followed by 7% from the United Kingdom (UK) and 5% from Germany

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Summary

Introduction

Health Technology Assessment (HTA) is a multidisciplinary field that systematically investigates the clinical efficacy and effectiveness, safety, cost, cost-effectiveness of health care interventions, as well as organizational implications, social consequences, and legal and ethical considerations [1]. Devices, diagnostics and treatments, and other clinical, public health, and organizational interventions. HTA reports include a systematic review of the clinical evidence in a transparent, unbiased, and robust manner in order to quantify the potential benefits and risks of health technologies [2,3]. The Federal Joint Committee (G-BA) and the Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG) are the most relevant HTA institutions in Germany. Health Technology Assessments (HTAs) are used to inform decision-making and their usefulness depends on the quality and relevance of research and specific studies for health-policy decisions. Little is known about the country of origin of studies used for HTAs

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