Decisions in health technology assessment: should we speak with one voice?

Abstract Decisions regarding the regulation of individual medicines differ from country to country. In the case of Relenza, Mulinari and Davis (Health Res Policy Syst 15:93, 2017) have suggested that these inconsistencies are primarily due to processes, statistical methodologies and technical capaci...

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Main Author: Tracy Merlin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-11-01
Series:Health Research Policy and Systems
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12961-018-0385-y
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spelling doaj-04992e344e074835b8c831c7933d21772020-11-25T00:34:30ZengBMCHealth Research Policy and Systems1478-45052018-11-011611310.1186/s12961-018-0385-yDecisions in health technology assessment: should we speak with one voice?Tracy Merlin0Adelaide Health Technology Assessment (AHTA), School of Public Health, University of AdelaideAbstract Decisions regarding the regulation of individual medicines differ from country to country. In the case of Relenza, Mulinari and Davis (Health Res Policy Syst 15:93, 2017) have suggested that these inconsistencies are primarily due to processes, statistical methodologies and technical capacity varying between regulatory agencies. They go on to name specific individuals involved in the evaluation of this anti-influenza medicine and imply that differences in the judgements of these individuals has affected public policy concerning the market access of this medicine. This Commentary argues that what may appear as inconsistent decision-making may in fact be due to differences in the applicability of the evidence base to the local population and health system for which each regulator has responsibility. If health technology assessors are providing nuanced judgements on the effectiveness of a medicine for the local population, differences in regulation and reimbursement decisions are to be expected.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12961-018-0385-yHealth technology assessmentRegulationHeterogeneityMeta-analysisInfluenza
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tracy Merlin
spellingShingle Tracy Merlin
Decisions in health technology assessment: should we speak with one voice?
Health Research Policy and Systems
Health technology assessment
Regulation
Heterogeneity
Meta-analysis
Influenza
author_facet Tracy Merlin
author_sort Tracy Merlin
title Decisions in health technology assessment: should we speak with one voice?
title_short Decisions in health technology assessment: should we speak with one voice?
title_full Decisions in health technology assessment: should we speak with one voice?
title_fullStr Decisions in health technology assessment: should we speak with one voice?
title_full_unstemmed Decisions in health technology assessment: should we speak with one voice?
title_sort decisions in health technology assessment: should we speak with one voice?
publisher BMC
series Health Research Policy and Systems
issn 1478-4505
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Abstract Decisions regarding the regulation of individual medicines differ from country to country. In the case of Relenza, Mulinari and Davis (Health Res Policy Syst 15:93, 2017) have suggested that these inconsistencies are primarily due to processes, statistical methodologies and technical capacity varying between regulatory agencies. They go on to name specific individuals involved in the evaluation of this anti-influenza medicine and imply that differences in the judgements of these individuals has affected public policy concerning the market access of this medicine. This Commentary argues that what may appear as inconsistent decision-making may in fact be due to differences in the applicability of the evidence base to the local population and health system for which each regulator has responsibility. If health technology assessors are providing nuanced judgements on the effectiveness of a medicine for the local population, differences in regulation and reimbursement decisions are to be expected.
topic Health technology assessment
Regulation
Heterogeneity
Meta-analysis
Influenza
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12961-018-0385-y
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