Bridging the gap between health and non-health investments: moving from cost-effectiveness analysis to a return on investment approach across sectors of economy.

Pedram Sendi
Author Information
  1. Pedram Sendi: Division of Health Economics, Basel Institute for Clinical Epidemiology, Basel University Hospital, Hebelstrasse 10, 3rd Floor, 4031 Basel, Switzerland. pedram.sendi@unibas.ch

Abstract

When choosing from a menu of treatment alternatives, the optimal treatment depends on the objective function and the assumptions of the model. The classical decision rule of cost-effectiveness analysis may be formulated via two different objective functions: (i) maximising health outcomes subject to the budget constraint or (ii) maximising the net benefit of the intervention with the budget being determined ex post. We suggest a more general objective function of (iii) maximising return on investment from available resources with consideration of health and non-health investments. The return on investment approach allows to adjust the analysis for the benefits forgone by alternative non-health investments from a societal or subsocietal perspective. We show that in the presence of positive returns on non-health investments the decision-maker's willingness to pay per unit of effect for a treatment program needs to be higher than its incremental cost-effectiveness ratio to be considered cost-effective.

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MeSH Term

Cost-Benefit Analysis
Decision Making
Humans
Investments
Resource Allocation
Social Justice

Word Cloud

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