Abstract
Well-established methods of economic evaluation are used in many countries to inform decisions about the funding of new medical interventions. To guide such decisions, it is important to consider what health gains would be expected from the same level of investment elsewhere in the health care system. Recent research in the United Kingdom has evaluated the evidence available and the methods required to estimate the health effects of changes in health care expenditure within the National Health Service. Because of the absence of sufficiently broad-ranging data, assumptions were required in the previously mentioned work to estimate health effects in terms of a broader measure of health (quality-adjusted life-years), which is more relevant for policy. These assumptions constitute important sources of uncertainty. This work presents an application of the structured elicitation of the judgments of key individuals about these uncertain quantities. This article describes the design and conduct of the exercise, including the quantities elicited, the individual (rather than consensus) approach used, how uncertainty in knowledge was elicited (mode and bounds of an 80% credible interval), and methods to generate group estimates. It also reports on a successful application involving 28 clinical experts and 25 individuals with policy responsibilities. Although, as expected, most experts found replying to the questions challenging, they were able to express their beliefs quantitatively. Consistent across the uncertainties elicited, experts’ judgments suggest that the quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) impacts of changes in expenditure from earlier work using assumptions are likely to have been underestimated and the “central” estimate of health opportunity cost from that work (£12,936 per QALY) to have been overestimated.
Highlights
This research aimed at formally eliciting the beliefs of key individuals on the 3 judgments outlined above, which are required for a policy-relevant estimate of health opportunity costs
Experts’ judgments suggest that, across all disease areas, mortality effects beyond year 1 are expected to be higher than effects in the first year
This research developed an exemplar elicitation exercise aimed at quantitatively gathering the beliefs of individuals on a set of quantities for which there is currently insufficient evidence but that are central to an estimate of health opportunity costs for the UK’s NHS
Summary
This research aimed at formally eliciting the beliefs of key individuals on the 3 judgments outlined above, which are required for a policy-relevant estimate of health opportunity costs. We aimed to recruit purposively 20 clinicians and 20 individuals affiliated with selected policy-relevant organisations.iii, Responses from experts were anonymous, but the organizations they belong to were recorded, as were the clinical areas of expertise, to facilitate analysis of betweenexpert heterogeneity.
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