1. A scoping review of pediatric economic evaluation 1980-2014: do trends over time reflect changing priorities in evaluation methods and childhood disease?
- Author
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Wendy J. Ungar, Kate Tsiplova, and Shannon M. Sullivan
- Subjects
Gerontology ,Research design ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Databases, Factual ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Health Status ,Child health ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Statistic ,Cost–utility analysis ,Cost–benefit analysis ,business.industry ,030503 health policy & services ,Health Policy ,Age Factors ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,General Medicine ,Cost-effectiveness analysis ,Grey literature ,Evaluation Studies as Topic ,Research Design ,Child, Preschool ,Economic evaluation ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Delivery of Health Care - Abstract
Economic evaluations conducted in children have unique features compared to adults. Important developments in pediatric economic evaluation in recent years include new options for valuing health states for cost-utility analysis (CUA) and shifting child health priorities. The Pediatric Economic Database Evaluation (PEDE) project includes a comprehensive database of pediatric health economic evaluations published since 1980. The objective of this scoping review was to identify trends over time in the use of CUA and other analytic techniques, and the therapeutic areas chosen for study. Areas covered: Medical and grey literature were searched, key characteristics were extracted, frequencies were tabulated and cross-tabulations were performed. Differences between early (1980 and 1999) and late (2000 and 2014) periods were assessed using a chi-squared statistic. Of the 2,776 pediatric economic evaluations published between 1980 and 2014, substantially more were cost-effectiveness analyses (CEAs) and CUAs than cost benefit analyses and cost minimization analyses (63.9 and 24.9% versus 7.6 and 3.6%, respectively). This pattern was consistent regardless of the type of intervention, disease or age group studied. A trend toward higher proportions of CUAs and CEAs was evident in the later period (X
- Published
- 2016
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