Using Expert Elicitation to Adjust Published Intervention Effects to Reflect the Local Context.

IF 1.9 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES MDM Policy and Practice Pub Date : 2024-01-25 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1177/23814683231226335
Jodi Gray, Tilenka R Thynne, Vaughn Eaton, Rebecca Larcombe, Mahsa Tantiongco, Jonathan Karnon
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Abstract

Background. Local health services make limited use of economic evaluation to inform decisions to fund new health service interventions. One barrier is the relevance of published intervention effects to the local setting, given these effects can strongly reflect the original evaluation context. Expert elicitation methods provide a structured approach to explicitly and transparently adjust published effect estimates, which can then be used in local-level economic evaluations to increase their local relevance. Expert elicitation was used to adjust published effect estimates for 2 interventions targeting the prevention of inpatient hypoglycemia. Methods. Elicitation was undertaken with 6 clinical experts. They were systematically presented with information regarding potential differences in patient characteristics and quality of care between the published study and local contexts, and regarding the design and application of the published study. The experts then assessed the intervention effects and provided estimates of the most realistic, most pessimistic, and most optimistic intervention effect sizes in the local context. Results. The experts estimated both interventions would be less effective in the local setting compared with the published effect estimates. For one intervention, the experts expected the lower complexity of admitted patients in the local setting would reduce the intervention's effectiveness. For the other intervention, the reduced effect was largely driven by differences in the scope of implementation (hospital-wide in the local setting compared with targeted implementation in the evaluation). Conclusions. The pragmatic elicitation methods reported in this article provide a feasible and acceptable approach to assess and adjust published intervention effects to better reflect expected effects in the local context. Further development and application of these methods is proposed to facilitate the use of local-level economic evaluation.

Highlights: Local health services make limited use of economic evaluation to inform their decisions on the funding of new health service interventions. One barrier to use is the relevance of published intervention evaluations to the local setting.Expert elicitation methods provide a structured way to consider differences between the evaluation and local settings and to explicitly and transparently adjust published effect estimates for use in local economic evaluations.The pragmatic elicitation methods reported in this article offer a feasible and acceptable approach to adjusting published intervention effects to better reflect the effects expected in the local context. This increases the relevance of economic evaluations for local decision makers.

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利用专家征询调整已公布的干预效果,以反映当地情况。
背景。地方医疗服务机构在决定是否资助新的医疗服务干预措施时,对经济评估的利用十分有限。其中一个障碍是已公布的干预效果与当地环境的相关性,因为这些效果可能会强烈反映最初的评估背景。专家征询法提供了一种结构化的方法,可以明确、透明地调整已公布的效果估计值,然后将其用于地方一级的经济评估,以提高其地方相关性。专家征询法被用于调整针对预防住院病人低血糖症的两种干预措施的已发表效果估计值。方法。对 6 位临床专家进行了征询。他们系统地了解了已发表研究与当地情况之间在患者特征和护理质量方面的潜在差异,以及已发表研究的设计和应用情况。然后,专家们对干预效果进行了评估,并对当地情况下最现实、最悲观和最乐观的干预效果大小进行了估计。结果。专家们估计,与公布的效果估计值相比,两种干预措施在当地环境中的效果都会较差。对于其中一项干预措施,专家们预计在当地环境下,入院病人的复杂程度较低,这将降低干预措施的效果。对于另一项干预措施,效果降低的主要原因是实施范围的不同(在当地环境下是在全院范围内实施,而在评估中则是有针对性地实施)。结论。本文报告的实用诱导方法为评估和调整已公布的干预效果提供了一种可行且可接受的方法,以更好地反映当地的预期效果。建议进一步开发和应用这些方法,以促进地方一级经济评估的使用:重点:地方医疗服务机构在决定是否资助新的医疗服务干预措施时,对经济评估的使用非常有限。专家征询法提供了一种结构化的方法来考虑评价与当地环境之间的差异,并明确、透明地调整已公布的效果估计值,以便用于当地经济评价。这提高了经济评估与地方决策者的相关性。
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来源期刊
MDM Policy and Practice
MDM Policy and Practice Medicine-Health Policy
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
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发文量
28
审稿时长
15 weeks
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