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Cross-national comparison of technology assessment processes

Objectives: To compare methods and results among four health technology assessment organizations in different countries. Methods: All assessment reports published between 1999 and 2001 by VATAP (United States), NICE (United Kingdom), CCOHTA (Canada), and AETS (Spain), were reviewed. Detailed informa...

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Published in:International journal of technology assessment in health care 2004-08, Vol.20 (3), p.300-310
Main Authors: García-Altés, Anna, Ondategui-Parra, Silvia, Neumann, Peter J.
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c406t-b9a3468bfe105da4b8cc405616e0045f77436f3a7eb3fe79ab980c432d3a23b73
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container_title International journal of technology assessment in health care
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creator García-Altés, Anna
Ondategui-Parra, Silvia
Neumann, Peter J.
description Objectives: To compare methods and results among four health technology assessment organizations in different countries. Methods: All assessment reports published between 1999 and 2001 by VATAP (United States), NICE (United Kingdom), CCOHTA (Canada), and AETS (Spain), were reviewed. Detailed information about the organization, the technology assessed, the methods used, and the recommendations made were collected. A descriptive analysis of the variables, as well as comparisons of means and proportions, was performed. Results: Sixty-one reports assessing seventy-six technologies were published: nine (11.8 percent) by VATAP, thirty-nine (51.3 percent) by NICE, twenty (26.3 percent) by CCOHTA, and eight (10.5 percent) by AETS. A total of 64.5 percent of the technologies assessed were related to a high prevalence disease in the corresponding country. Most of the assessments addressed treatments (73.7 percent) and were mostly drugs (56.6 percent) and devices (23.7 percent). Most organizations used reviews of effectiveness and economic evaluations (64.5 percent), systematic reviews (21.1 percent), and original economic evaluations (36.7 percent). In 38.1 percent, the technology was recommended; the rest of the cases had no formal recommendations. Conclusions: Critical issues for future technology assessment efforts are making assessment processes more consistent, transparent, and evidence-based; formalizing the inclusion of economic and ethical considerations; and making more explicit the prioritization process for selecting technologies for assessment and reassessment.
doi_str_mv 10.1017/S0266462304001126
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Methods: All assessment reports published between 1999 and 2001 by VATAP (United States), NICE (United Kingdom), CCOHTA (Canada), and AETS (Spain), were reviewed. Detailed information about the organization, the technology assessed, the methods used, and the recommendations made were collected. A descriptive analysis of the variables, as well as comparisons of means and proportions, was performed. Results: Sixty-one reports assessing seventy-six technologies were published: nine (11.8 percent) by VATAP, thirty-nine (51.3 percent) by NICE, twenty (26.3 percent) by CCOHTA, and eight (10.5 percent) by AETS. A total of 64.5 percent of the technologies assessed were related to a high prevalence disease in the corresponding country. Most of the assessments addressed treatments (73.7 percent) and were mostly drugs (56.6 percent) and devices (23.7 percent). Most organizations used reviews of effectiveness and economic evaluations (64.5 percent), systematic reviews (21.1 percent), and original economic evaluations (36.7 percent). In 38.1 percent, the technology was recommended; the rest of the cases had no formal recommendations. 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Methods: All assessment reports published between 1999 and 2001 by VATAP (United States), NICE (United Kingdom), CCOHTA (Canada), and AETS (Spain), were reviewed. Detailed information about the organization, the technology assessed, the methods used, and the recommendations made were collected. A descriptive analysis of the variables, as well as comparisons of means and proportions, was performed. Results: Sixty-one reports assessing seventy-six technologies were published: nine (11.8 percent) by VATAP, thirty-nine (51.3 percent) by NICE, twenty (26.3 percent) by CCOHTA, and eight (10.5 percent) by AETS. A total of 64.5 percent of the technologies assessed were related to a high prevalence disease in the corresponding country. Most of the assessments addressed treatments (73.7 percent) and were mostly drugs (56.6 percent) and devices (23.7 percent). 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source Cambridge Journals Online; ABI/INFORM Global
subjects Alzheimer's disease
Assessment process
Canada
Clinical medicine
Clinical trials
Coverage decisions
Data collection
Decision making
Drugs
Funding
GENERAL ESSAYS
Genetic testing
Health technology assessment
International comparison
Medical procedures
Medical technology
Mental disorders
Methods
Participation
Pharmaceutical industry
Quality Assurance, Health Care - methods
Spain
Studies
Technology
Technology Assessment, Biomedical - methods
Tumors
United Kingdom
United States
title Cross-national comparison of technology assessment processes
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