Capacity building in agencies for efficient and effective health technology assessment
Autori
Mueller D, Gutiérrez-Ibarluzea I, Schuller T, Chiumente M, Ahn J, Pichon-Riviere A, García-Martí S, Grainger D, Cobbs E, Marchetti M
Topic
Analisi statistiche e metanalisi
Rivista
International journal of technology assessment in healthcare
Impact factor
1,494
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Health technology assessment (HTA) yields information that can be ideally used to address deficiencies in health systems and to create a wider understanding of the impact of different policy considerations around technology reimbursement and use. The structure of HTA programs varies across different jurisdictions according to decision-maker needs. Moreover, conducting HTA requires specialized skills. Effective decision making should include multiple criteria (medical, economic, technical, ethical, social, legal, and cultural) and requires multi-disciplinary teams of experts working together to produce these assessments. A workshop explored the multi-disciplinary skills and competencies required to build an effective and efficient HTA team, with a focus on low- and middle-income settings.
METHODS: This proceeding summarizes main points from a workshop on capacity building, drawing on presentations and group discussions among attendees including different points of view.
RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: The workshop and thus this study would have benefited from a larger variety of stakeholders. Therefore, the conclusions arising from the workshop are not the opinion of a representative sample of HTA professionals. Nonetheless, organizations and speakers were carefully selected to provide a valuable approach to this theme. Thus, these proceedings highlight some of the gaps and needs in the education and training programs offered worldwide and calls for further investigation.
Link PubMed del paper
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27745567/