Comparative Effectiveness Research and Evidence‐Based Health Policy: Experience from Four Countries
- 4 June 2009
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Milbank Quarterly
- Vol. 87 (2) , 339-367
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0009.2009.00560.x
Abstract
The discussion about improving the efficiency, quality, and long-term sustainability of the U.S. health care system is increasingly focusing on the need to provide better evidence for decision making through comparative effectiveness research (CER). In recent years, several other countries have established agencies to evaluate health technologies and broader management strategies to inform health care policy decisions. This article reviews experiences from Britain, France, Australia, and Germany. This article draws on the experience of senior technical and administrative staff in setting up and running the CER entities studied. Besides reviewing the agencies' websites, legal framework documents, and informal interviews with key stakeholders, this analysis was informed by a workshop bringing together U.S. and international experts. This article builds a matrix of features identified from the international models studied that offer insights into near-term decisions about the location, design, and function of a U.S.-based CER entity. While each country has developed a CER capacity unique to its health system, elements such as the inclusiveness of relevant stakeholders, transparency in operation, independence of the central government and other interests, and adaptability to a changing environment are prerequisites for these entities' successful operation. While the CER entities evolved separately and have different responsibilities, they have adopted a set of core structural, technical, and procedural principles, including mechanisms for engaging with stakeholders, governance and oversight arrangements, and explicit methodologies for analyzing evidence, to ensure a high-quality product that is relevant to their system.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Health literacy and patient information: Developing the methodology for a national evidence-based health websitePatient Education and Counseling, 2008
- Evidence-Based Decision Making: When Should We Wait For More Information?Health Affairs, 2008
- Payers growing influence on R&D decision makingNature Reviews Drug Discovery, 2008
- Information on Cost-Effectiveness: An Essential Product of a National Comparative Effectiveness ProgramAnnals of Internal Medicine, 2008
- Prices for Innovative Pharmaceutical Products That Provide Health Gain: A Comparison Between Australia and the United StatesValue in Health, 2007
- Satisfaction Guaranteed — “Payment by Results” for Biologic AgentsNew England Journal of Medicine, 2007
- Coverage with evidence development: a very good beginning, but much to be done. Commentary to Hutton et al.International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care, 2007
- Prices And Availability Of Biopharmaceuticals: An International ComparisonHealth Affairs, 2006
- Developing A Center For Comparative Effectiveness InformationHealth Affairs, 2006
- National Institute for Clinical Excellence and its value judgmentsBMJ, 2004