Stochastic league tables: communicating cost‐effectiveness results to decision‐makers
- 16 July 2001
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Health Economics
- Vol. 10 (5) , 473-477
- https://doi.org/10.1002/hec.614
Abstract
The presentation of the results of uncertainty analysis in cost‐effectiveness analysis (CEA) in the literature has been relatively academic with little attention paid to the question of how decision‐makers should interpret the information particularly when confidence intervals overlap. This question is especially relevant to sectoral CEA providing information on the costs and effects of a wide range of interventions. This paper introduces stochastic league tables to inform decision‐makers about the probability that a specific intervention would be included in the optimal mix of interventions for various levels of resource availability, taking into account the uncertainty surrounding costs and effectiveness. This information helps decision‐makers decide on the relative attractiveness of different intervention mixes, and also on the implications for trading gains in efficiency for gains in other goals such as reducing health inequalities and increasing health system responsiveness. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Building Uncertainty Into Cost-Effectiveness RankingsMedical Care, 2000
- Development of WHO guidelines on generalized cost-effectiveness analysisHealth Economics, 2000
- Estimating uncertainty ranges for costs by the bootstrap procedure combined with probabilistic sensitivity analysisHealth Economics, 1999
- Confidence intervals or surfaces? Uncertainty on the cost-effectiveness planeHealth Economics, 1998
- Net Health BenefitsMedical Decision Making, 1998
- Pulling cost-effectiveness analysis up by its bootstraps: A non-parametric approach to confidence interval estimationHealth Economics, 1997
- Confidence intervals for cost-effectiveness ratios: An application of Fieller's theoremHealth Economics, 1996
- Cost-effectiveness ratios: in a league of their ownHealth Policy, 1994
- Cost-effectiveness league tables: More harm than good?Social Science & Medicine, 1993