Goeree Ron, Levin Les, Chandra Kiran, Bowen James M, Blackhouse Gord, Tarride Jean-Eric, Burke Natasha, Bischof Matthias, Xie Feng, O'Reilly Daria
Programs for Assessment of Technology in Health Research Institute, St Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
J Am Coll Radiol. 2009 May;6(5):332-42. doi: 10.1016/j.jacr.2009.01.012.
Health care expenditures continue to escalate, and pressures for increased spending will continue. Health care decision makers from publicly financed systems, private insurance companies, or even from individual health care institutions, will continue to be faced with making difficult purchasing, access, and reimbursement decisions. As a result, decision makers are increasingly turning to evidence-based platforms to help control costs and make the most efficient use of existing resources. Most tools used to assist with evidence-based decision making focus on clinical outcomes.
Health technology assessment (HTA) is increasing in popularity because it also considers other factors important for decision making, such as cost, social and ethical values, legal issues, and factors such as the feasibility of implementation. In some jurisdictions, HTAs have also been supplemented with primary data collection to help address uncertainty that may still exist after conducting a traditional HTA.
The HTA process adopted in Ontario, Canada, is unique in that assessments are also made to determine what primary data research should be conducted and what should be collected in these studies. In this article, concerns with the traditional HTA process are discussed, followed by a description of the HTA process that has been established in Ontario, with a particular focus on the data collection program followed by the Programs for Assessment of Technology in Health Research Institute. An illustrative example is used to show how the Ontario HTA process works and the role value of information analyses plays in addressing decision uncertainty, determining research feasibility, and determining study data collection needs.
医疗保健支出持续攀升,且支出增加的压力仍将存在。来自公共资助体系、私人保险公司乃至个别医疗机构的医疗保健决策者,将继续面临艰难的采购、准入和报销决策。因此,决策者越来越多地转向基于证据的平台,以帮助控制成本并最有效地利用现有资源。大多数用于辅助基于证据决策的工具都侧重于临床结果。
卫生技术评估(HTA)越来越受欢迎,因为它还考虑了对决策很重要的其他因素,如成本、社会和伦理价值、法律问题以及实施可行性等因素。在一些司法管辖区,卫生技术评估还通过收集原始数据进行补充,以帮助解决在进行传统卫生技术评估后可能仍然存在的不确定性。
加拿大安大略省采用的卫生技术评估流程独具特色,因为评估还包括确定应开展哪些原始数据研究以及这些研究应收集哪些数据。本文首先讨论了对传统卫生技术评估流程的担忧,接着描述了安大略省建立的卫生技术评估流程,特别关注卫生研究机构技术评估项目所采用的数据收集计划。文中通过一个示例来说明安大略省卫生技术评估流程的运作方式,以及信息分析在解决决策不确定性、确定研究可行性和确定研究数据收集需求方面所起的作用。