Economic perspectives on measuring health-related outcomes

Chapter 38
Economic perspectives on measuring health-related outcomes


image

Health economists have made significant contributions to the development of methods for measuring and valuing health outcomes. This chapter gives a brief overview of some of the most common measures now used (QALYs and DALYs) either in evaluating public health interventions or in prioritising investment for different global health problems, and also introduces the main methods used for valuing health states.


Quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs)


It is obvious that many diseases, and their treatments, affect quality of life (or morbidity) as well as length of life (or survival, mortality). In the last two decades various methods have emerged for combining both of these outcomes in the same measure. Quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) count the number of years of ‘full health’ or ‘perfect health’ that would be equivalent to a greater number of years in a state worse than full health. For example, 10 years lived at ‘half full health’ would yield 5 QALYs, whereas 30 years at two-thirds full health would yield 20 QALYs.


The importance of the QALY is best illustrated by the graph shown in Figure 38a. After one treatment (A: let’s say surgery) a patient lives on average for 14 years. This compares with only 11 years average survival following the medical treatment (B). On the basis of differences in expected survival, clearly treatment A would be preferred to treatment B. However, this ignores possible differences in the quality of life following treatment. In particular, while there is a slight rise in the quality of life following surgery, overall the quality of life following surgery is lower than that following medical treatment. In fact, for the last 3 or 4 years of added survival the quality of life is only marginally above zero (where zero is usually defined as ‘as bad as being dead’). As a result, patients obtain more QALYs after treatment B than treatment A.


Disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs)


Unlike QALYs, which were developed to support economic evaluations, disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) were developed to assess the relative burden of different diseases and injuries (see also Chapter 18

Only gold members can continue reading. Log In or Register to continue

Stay updated, free articles. Join our Telegram channel

Oct 31, 2017 | Posted by in PUBLIC HEALTH AND EPIDEMIOLOGY | Comments Off on Economic perspectives on measuring health-related outcomes

Full access? Get Clinical Tree

Get Clinical Tree app for offline access