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Modelling for cost-effectiveness analysis

Statistics in Medicine, 1999
A model creates the framework for a cost-effectiveness analysis, allowing decision makers to explore the implications of using an intervention in different ways and under different conditions. To serve its purpose a model must produce accurate predictions and allow for substantial variation in the factors that influence costs and effects.
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Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Transplantation

Surgical Clinics of North America, 1986
As organ transplantation has become increasingly effective, difficult questions have been raised about its costs. Cost-effectiveness analysis is one approach that permits relatively straightforward comparisons not only among transplant procedures but among other costly lifesaving therapies.
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Analysis of the cost-effectiveness of PACS.

American Journal of Roentgenology, 1991
Picture archiving and communications systems (PACS) have emerged as an important part of digital imaging technology. However, the future of PACS is uncertain because its economic viability is in doubt. Cost-effectiveness analysis is an accepted technique for evaluating the economics of new technologies.
Wilbur L. Smith   +4 more
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Cost-effectiveness analysis in anaesthesia

Current Opinion in Anaesthesiology, 1999
In order to preserve the quality of anaesthetic care under cost containment programmes, the concept of value-based anaesthesia was introduced. To achieve this goal, namely, the provision of the best possible care attainable at a reasonable cost, studies are necessary that compare anaesthetic techniques in terms of both quality and costs, e.g.
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Cost-Effectiveness Analysis

1985
In a traditional cost-effectiveness analysis there is a single objective which is usually measured by a common physical unit (i.e. the number of breast cancers detected, number of chronic schizophrenics who return to full employment), and we want either to achieve a fixed level of objective at minimum cost, or as much objective as we can for a fixed ...
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The Road to Cost-Effectiveness Analysis

The Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly. Health and Society, 1982
the application of cost-benefit analysis to health care can be found in the work of Selma Mushkin (1958), work which is both in the mainstream of economics and in the vanguard of health economics. In cost-benefit analysis the mainstream has meant a preoccupation with the measurement (valuation) of economic benefits. As seen by economists, the essential
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Cost-Effectiveness Analysis

1996
This chapter is devoted to cost-effectiveness analysis. In a cost-effectiveness analysis the costs are measured in monetary terms and the health effects are measured in non-monetary terms, e.g. the number of life years gained. The ratio between costs and health effects is then estimated as e.g. the cost per gained life year. Cost-effectiveness analysis
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Heterogeneity in Cost-Effectiveness Analysis

2019
Cost-effectiveness analysis is conducted with the aim of maximizing population-level health outcomes given an exogenously determined budget constraint. Considerable health economic benefits can be achieved by reflecting heterogeneity in cost-effectiveness studies and implementing interventions based on this analysis.
Andrew Briggs, Ciaran N. Kohli-Lynch
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A Primer on Cost-Effectiveness Analysis

Clinics in Podiatric Medicine and Surgery
A cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) is a type of health economics model that uses a systematic approach to simplify the complexities that exist in health-care decision-making. A CEA aids in medical decision-making by considering both the costs of a treatment and how effective that treatment is for at least 2 competing strategies.
Rachel H, Albright, Adam E, Fleischer
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Cost-effectiveness analysis for surgeons

Surgery, 2009
Y. Claire Wang   +3 more
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