Health technology assessment: an evidence-based medicine perspective.

A challenge of health technology assessment is integrating the information from different disciplines. This talk focuses on the evidence-based medicine perspective and challenges 3 assumptions of health technology assessment: assumptions about effectiveness, assumptions about coverage by health tech...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Glasziou, P
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2012
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author Glasziou, P
author_facet Glasziou, P
author_sort Glasziou, P
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description A challenge of health technology assessment is integrating the information from different disciplines. This talk focuses on the evidence-based medicine perspective and challenges 3 assumptions of health technology assessment: assumptions about effectiveness, assumptions about coverage by health technology assessment, and assumptions about costs being immutable. Challenging these assumptions has several implications. First is the need for better evidence on effects: both low-volume, high-cost technologies and low-cost, high-volume technologies that are ineffective drains on health care systems' resources. Second, cheap but effective technologies should be better promoted, as they can displace high-cost technologies. Finally, for effective but expensive technologies, we should work to lower the price and/or costs.
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spelling oxford-uuid:805ad0bc-f2cf-4786-920e-280e6afd1e6a2022-03-26T21:22:43ZHealth technology assessment: an evidence-based medicine perspective.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:805ad0bc-f2cf-4786-920e-280e6afd1e6aEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2012Glasziou, PA challenge of health technology assessment is integrating the information from different disciplines. This talk focuses on the evidence-based medicine perspective and challenges 3 assumptions of health technology assessment: assumptions about effectiveness, assumptions about coverage by health technology assessment, and assumptions about costs being immutable. Challenging these assumptions has several implications. First is the need for better evidence on effects: both low-volume, high-cost technologies and low-cost, high-volume technologies that are ineffective drains on health care systems' resources. Second, cheap but effective technologies should be better promoted, as they can displace high-cost technologies. Finally, for effective but expensive technologies, we should work to lower the price and/or costs.
spellingShingle Glasziou, P
Health technology assessment: an evidence-based medicine perspective.
title Health technology assessment: an evidence-based medicine perspective.
title_full Health technology assessment: an evidence-based medicine perspective.
title_fullStr Health technology assessment: an evidence-based medicine perspective.
title_full_unstemmed Health technology assessment: an evidence-based medicine perspective.
title_short Health technology assessment: an evidence-based medicine perspective.
title_sort health technology assessment an evidence based medicine perspective
work_keys_str_mv AT glaszioup healthtechnologyassessmentanevidencebasedmedicineperspective