Abstract
Healthcare cost-effectiveness analysis is increasingly used to inform priority-setting in low- and middle-income countries and by global health donors. As part of such analyses, cost-effectiveness thresholds are commonly used to determine what is, or is not, cost-effective. Recent years have seen a shift in best practice from a rule-of-thumb 1x or 3x per capita GDP threshold towards using thresholds that, in theory, reflect the opportunity cost of new investments within a given country. In this paper, we observe that international donors face both different resource constraints and opportunity costs compared to national decision-makers. Hence, their perspective on cost-effectiveness thresholds must be different. We discuss the potential implications of distinguishing between national and donor thresholds and outline broad options for how to approach setting a donor-perspective threshold. Further work is needed to clarify healthcare cost-effectiveness threshold theory in the context of international aid and to develop practical policy frameworks for implementation.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 214 |
| Journal | F1000Research |
| Volume | 12 |
| Early online date | 27 Feb 2023 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 18 Jan 2024 |
Funding
TD and YLC and supported by a grant for the International Decision Support Initiative (IDSI) from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (grant number: OPP1202541).
Keywords
- Threshold
- Cost-effectiveness
- Global Health
- Aid
- Priority-setting
- Health Financing
- Head
- Cost-Benefit Analysis
- Policy
- Cost-Effectiveness Analysis