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Improving the effectiveness and efficiency of evidence production for health technology assessment

Improving the effectiveness and efficiency of evidence production for health technology assessment
Improving the effectiveness and efficiency of evidence production for health technology assessment

Objectives: Health Technology Assessment (HTA) needs to address the challenges posed by high cost, effective technologies, expedited regulatory approaches, and the opportunities provided by collaborative real-world evaluation of technologies. The Health Technology Assessment International (HTAi) Policy Forum met to consider these issues and the implications for evidence production to inform HTA. This paper shares their discussion to stimulate further debate.

Methods: A background paper, presentations, group discussions, and stakeholder role play at the 2015 HTAi Policy Forum meeting informed this paper.

Results: HTA has an important role to play in helping improve evidence production and ensuring that the health service is ready to adopt effective technologies. It needs to move from simply informing health system decisions to also working actively to align stakeholder expectations about realistic evidence requirements. Processes to support dialogue over the health technology life cycle need to be developed that are mindful of limited resources, operate across jurisdictions and learn from past processes. Collaborations between health technology developers and health systems in different countries should be encouraged to develop evidence that will inform decision making. New analytical techniques emerging for real-world data should be harnessed to support modeling for HTA.

Conclusions: A paradigm shift (to “Health Innovation System 2.0”) is suggested where HTA adopts a more central, proactive role to support alignment within and amongst stakeholders over the whole life cycle of the technology. This could help ensure that evidence production is better aligned with patient and health system needs and so is more effective and efficient.
0266-4623
201-206
Facey, Karen
4c9b3baa-0d38-4dba-afc9-ec5a1f598027
Henshall, Chris
3e840fdd-e007-4bd7-be39-41da2250f533
Sampietro-Colom, Laura
23867f11-2fd8-4ff6-a4b3-073db8cec3dc
Thomas, Sarah
07d750be-9d5c-4aba-88c9-d888c6c7cb72
Facey, Karen
4c9b3baa-0d38-4dba-afc9-ec5a1f598027
Henshall, Chris
3e840fdd-e007-4bd7-be39-41da2250f533
Sampietro-Colom, Laura
23867f11-2fd8-4ff6-a4b3-073db8cec3dc
Thomas, Sarah
07d750be-9d5c-4aba-88c9-d888c6c7cb72

Facey, Karen, Henshall, Chris, Sampietro-Colom, Laura and Thomas, Sarah (2015) Improving the effectiveness and efficiency of evidence production for health technology assessment. International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care, 31 (4), 201-206. (doi:10.1017/S0266462315000355).

Record type: Article

Abstract


Objectives: Health Technology Assessment (HTA) needs to address the challenges posed by high cost, effective technologies, expedited regulatory approaches, and the opportunities provided by collaborative real-world evaluation of technologies. The Health Technology Assessment International (HTAi) Policy Forum met to consider these issues and the implications for evidence production to inform HTA. This paper shares their discussion to stimulate further debate.

Methods: A background paper, presentations, group discussions, and stakeholder role play at the 2015 HTAi Policy Forum meeting informed this paper.

Results: HTA has an important role to play in helping improve evidence production and ensuring that the health service is ready to adopt effective technologies. It needs to move from simply informing health system decisions to also working actively to align stakeholder expectations about realistic evidence requirements. Processes to support dialogue over the health technology life cycle need to be developed that are mindful of limited resources, operate across jurisdictions and learn from past processes. Collaborations between health technology developers and health systems in different countries should be encouraged to develop evidence that will inform decision making. New analytical techniques emerging for real-world data should be harnessed to support modeling for HTA.

Conclusions: A paradigm shift (to “Health Innovation System 2.0”) is suggested where HTA adopts a more central, proactive role to support alignment within and amongst stakeholders over the whole life cycle of the technology. This could help ensure that evidence production is better aligned with patient and health system needs and so is more effective and efficient.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 8 December 2015
Published date: 2015

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 435307
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/435307
ISSN: 0266-4623
PURE UUID: 7c0312d4-11da-4283-aaef-6bd76ec0a2aa
ORCID for Sarah Thomas: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0541-4555

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Date deposited: 30 Oct 2019 17:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:17

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Contributors

Author: Karen Facey
Author: Chris Henshall
Author: Laura Sampietro-Colom
Author: Sarah Thomas ORCID iD

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