Health technology assessment (HTA) is the multidisciplinary field of policy analysis that studies medical, social, ethical, and economic implications of the development, diffusion, and use of health technologies. Its worldwide diffusion needs to be understood in the context of evidence-based healthcare delivery policy, and it is strongly driven by the search for new cost-containment policies by the governments of universal healthcare systems. This article presents the three main pillars of HTA: evaluating comparative effectiveness, cost-effectiveness, and organizational impact. While comparative analysis is more familiar to cardiologists, cost-effectiveness and organizational studies are less widely known because they expand the perspective of the evaluation to institutional settings and society at large and require significant inter-disciplinary work. Sound economic and organizational studies that extend comparative effectiveness studies may facilitate dialogue between medical science and policymaking. © The Author 2011.

Fattore, G., Maniadakis, N., Mantovani, L., Boriani, G. (2011). Health technology assessment: What is it? Current status and perspectives in the field of electrophysiology. EUROPACE, 13(Suppl. 2), ii49-ii53 [10.1093/europace/eur083].

Health technology assessment: What is it? Current status and perspectives in the field of electrophysiology

Mantovani, LG;
2011

Abstract

Health technology assessment (HTA) is the multidisciplinary field of policy analysis that studies medical, social, ethical, and economic implications of the development, diffusion, and use of health technologies. Its worldwide diffusion needs to be understood in the context of evidence-based healthcare delivery policy, and it is strongly driven by the search for new cost-containment policies by the governments of universal healthcare systems. This article presents the three main pillars of HTA: evaluating comparative effectiveness, cost-effectiveness, and organizational impact. While comparative analysis is more familiar to cardiologists, cost-effectiveness and organizational studies are less widely known because they expand the perspective of the evaluation to institutional settings and society at large and require significant inter-disciplinary work. Sound economic and organizational studies that extend comparative effectiveness studies may facilitate dialogue between medical science and policymaking. © The Author 2011.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Comparative effectiveness; Cost effectiveness; Defibrillators; Health economics; Health technology assessment; Policy
English
2011
13
Suppl. 2
ii49
ii53
none
Fattore, G., Maniadakis, N., Mantovani, L., Boriani, G. (2011). Health technology assessment: What is it? Current status and perspectives in the field of electrophysiology. EUROPACE, 13(Suppl. 2), ii49-ii53 [10.1093/europace/eur083].
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/282169
Citazioni
  • Scopus 24
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 20
Social impact