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Cost–Benefit Analyses

2009
Only in a few European countries (Switzerland, France, Poland, Belgium, and some local projects in Germany) are minimally invasive breast biopsies (MIBB) reimbursed by health insurance. Public health authorities ask for detailed estimates and calculation of costs as well as laborious, expensive evaluation procedures as the basis for decision making ...
Renzo, Brun Del Re, Regula E, Bürki
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cost–benefit analysis

Evaluation Review, 1987
Conflicts enlarge the scope of the considerations that need to be addressed by program and project evaluations. The enlargement of a problem's boundaries may include shifts in the ethical premises used to assign values to the plan's indirect consequences. This review of the conflict generated by a Bay Area Rapid Transit System station's potential land-
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ISOTRETINOIN: COST‐BENEFIT STUDY

Australasian Journal of Dermatology, 1991
SummaryIsotretinoin is a well‐established, effective treatment for severe nodutocystic acne. An important consideration which may limit the prescription of isotretinoin is its cost. Based on a literature review, we have compared isotretinoin with the conventional combination of antibiotics and topical therapies for the treatment of severe nodulocystic ...
M L, Lee, A, Cooper
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Preoperative Immunonutrition: Cost‐Benefit Analysis

Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, 2005
Background: To evaluate whether preoperative immunonutrition might lead to a savings in patient care. Data on resources consumed to treat postoperative complications are scanty, but morbidity costs continue to be a major burden for any health care system.
Braga, M, GIANOTTI, LUCA VITTORIO
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Cost Benefit Analysis

2011
Cost-benefit analysis: a practical guide is a complete guide to the principles and practice of using cost-benefit analysis (CBA) effectively for making better decisions and allocating resources. This comprehensive and accessible text can be used without prior knowledge of economics, and provides the necessary skills to understand the ...
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Cost–Benefit Analysis

2017
Cost-benefit analysis (CBA) is the root of Health Economics and is based on the welfare theory. CBA is the broadest economic evaluation (EE) method that assesses all benefits and costs in monetary units; the production of welfare is expressed in terms of net benefit (the difference between benefits and costs). The main goal in the welfarist approach is
David L. Weimer, Aidan R. Vining
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THE COST-BENEFIT APPROACH

British Medical Bulletin, 1974
There are not, and probably never will be, enough resources to satisfy the community's desires for things that improve the quality of life. This poses the necessity for choice, and hence the consideration of priorities. In the medical field two distinct kinds of choice arise: one at the clinical level and the other in the planning process. At the point
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Cost–Benefit Analysis

2008
Chemical Leasing is based on the principle of increasing the efficiency of processes using chemicals by utilising the specific knowledge of the supplier (and/or the producer) and sharing the savings between supplier and user of the chemical. The following cost — benefit analysis presents a simplified model, just taking the business relations of two ...
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