Abstract

BackgroundHealth technology assessment and healthcare decision-making are based on multiple criteria and evidence, and heterogeneous opinions of participating stakeholders. Multi-criteria decision analysis (MCDA) offers a potential framework to systematize this process and take different perspectives into account. The objectives of this study were to explore perspectives and preferences across German stakeholders when appraising healthcare interventions, using multi-criteria assessment of a heart pulmonary sensor as a case study.MethodsAn online survey of 100 German healthcare stakeholders was conducted using a comprehensive MCDA framework (EVIDEM V2.2). Participants were asked to provide i) relative weights for each criterion of the framework; ii) performance scores for a health pulmonary sensor, based on available data synthesized for each criterion; and iii) qualitative feedback on the consideration of contextual criteria. Normalized weights and scores were combined using a linear model to calculate a value estimate across different stakeholders. Differences across types of stakeholders were explored.ResultsThe survey was completed by 54 participants. The most important criteria were efficacy, patient reported outcomes, disease severity, safety, and quality of evidence (relative weight >0.075 each). Compared to all participants, policymakers gave more weight to budget impact and quality of evidence. The quantitative appraisal of a pulmonary heart sensor revealed differences in scoring performance of this intervention at the criteria level between stakeholder groups. The highest value estimate of the sensor reached 0.68 (on a scale of 0 to 1, 1 representing maximum value) for industry representatives and the lowest value of 0.40 was reported for policymakers, compared to 0.48 for all participants. Participants indicated that most qualitative criteria should be considered and their impact on the quantitative appraisal was captured transparently.ConclusionsThe study identified important variations in perspectives across German stakeholders when appraising a healthcare intervention and revealed that MCDA can demonstrate the value of a specified technology for all participating stakeholders. Better understanding of these differences at the criteria level, in particular between policymakers and industry representatives, is important to focus innovation aligned with patient health and healthcare system values and constraints.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12961-015-0011-1) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Health technology assessment and healthcare decision-making are based on multiple criteria and evidence, and heterogeneous opinions of participating stakeholders

  • The qualitative feedback contains both aspects: preferences and values as well as perception and understanding of the evidence. Better understanding of these differences across stakeholders at the criteria level is important to focus innovation aligned with patient health and healthcare system values and constraints [44]

  • This study provided important insights into the current decision-making landscape in Germany and revealed that Multi-criteria decision analysis (MCDA) can demonstrate the value of a specified technology for all participating stakeholders

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Summary

Introduction

Health technology assessment and healthcare decision-making are based on multiple criteria and evidence, and heterogeneous opinions of participating stakeholders. Health technology assessment (HTA) is defined by the European Network for HTA as a “multidisciplinary process that summarizes information about the medical, social, economic and ethical issues related to the use of a health technology in a systematic, transparent, unbiased, robust manner. HTA is an essential tool for health policy decision-making as it assesses the available evidence about new health technologies. Frequent gaps in the evidence and associated uncertainty contribute to the challenges faced by decision makers. The results are mainly presented side-byside and decision-makers are struggling to evaluate contradicting outcomes of complex HTA (e.g., better medical outcome but worse social outcome) [4]

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