Abstract

BackgroundHealthcare spending has grown over the last decades in all developed countries. Making hard choices for investments in a rational, evidence-informed, systematic, transparent and legitimate manner constitutes an important objective. Yet, most scientific work in this area has focused on developing/improving prescriptive approaches for decision making and presenting case studies. The present work aimed to describe existing practices of priority setting and resource allocation (PSRA) within the context of publicly funded health care systems of high-income countries and inform areas for further improvement and research.MethodsAn online qualitative survey, developed from a theoretical framework, was administered with decision-makers and academics from 18 countries. 450 individuals were invited and 58 participated (13% of response rate).ResultsWe found evidence that resource allocation is still largely carried out based on historical patterns and through ad hoc decisions, despite the widely held understanding that decisions should be based on multiple explicit criteria. Health technology assessment (HTA) was the tool most commonly indicated by respondents as a formal priority setting strategy. Several approaches were reported to have been used, with special emphasis on Program Budgeting and Marginal Analysis (PBMA), but limited evidence exists on their evaluation and routine use. Disinvestment frameworks are still very rare. There is increasing convergence on the use of multiple types of evidence to judge the value of investment options.ConclusionsEfforts to establish formal and explicit processes and rationales for decision-making in priority setting and resource allocation have been still rare outside the HTA realm. Our work indicates the need of development/improvement of decision-making frameworks in PSRA that: 1) have well-defined steps; 2) are based on multiple criteria; 3) are capable of assessing the opportunity costs involved; 4) focus on achieving higher value and not just on adoption; 5) engage involved stakeholders and the general public; 6) make good use and appraisal of all evidence available; and 6) emphasize transparency, legitimacy, and fairness.

Highlights

  • Healthcare spending has grown over the last decades in all developed countries

  • The first choice was to focus on publicly funded health care systems, which broadly speaking could refer to systems or system components as diverse as the Canadian public single-payer insurance, the American programs Medicare and Medicaid, the British National Health Service (NHS), or the public component of social insurance systems like those in France or Germany

  • In total, 450 individuals were invited to participate in our study from December 2017 and May 2018: 135 were identified in our initial search process, 44 were suggested through snowball sampling, and 273 contacts were obtained through the International Society on Priorities in Health (ISPH) list

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Healthcare spending has grown over the last decades in all developed countries. Making hard choices for investments in a rational, evidence-informed, systematic, transparent and legitimate manner constitutes an important objective. Most scientific work in this area has focused on developing/improving prescriptive approaches for decision making and presenting case studies. The present work aimed to describe existing practices of priority setting and resource allocation (PSRA) within the context of publicly funded health care systems of high-income countries and inform areas for further improvement and research. Organizations (and individuals) must constantly give preference to some types of spending over others. Individuals, companies, and governments alike are constantly selecting the priorities to which their scarce resources will be allocated. The process of assigning precedence to certain areas or services to receive investments is referred to in the scientific literature as priority setting and resource allocation (PSRA) or priority setting [1]. Developing tools and knowledge to allocate scarce resources in the most efficient manner has become increasingly relevant in the field of health economics and public policy

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call