Sample size requirements for epidemiologic studies are usually determined on the basis of the desired level of statistical power. Suppose, however, that one is planning a study in which the participants' true exposure levels are unobservable. Instead, the analysis will be based on an imprecise surro
Dangerous omissions: the consequences of ignoring decision uncertainty
β Scribed by Susan C. Griffin; Karl P. Claxton; Stephen J. Palmer; Mark J. Sculpher
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 196 KB
- Volume
- 20
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1057-9230
- DOI
- 10.1002/hec.1586
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Institutions with the responsibility for making adoption (reimbursement) decisions in health care often lack the remit to demand or commission further research: adoption decisions are their only policy instrument. The decision to adopt a technology also influences the prospects of acquiring further evidence because the incentives to conduct research are reduced and the ethical basis of further clinical trials maybe undermined. In these circumstances the decision maker must consider whether the benefits of immediate access to a technology exceeds the value of the evidence which maybe forgone for future patients. We outline how these expected opportunity losses can be established from the perspective of a societal decision maker with and without the remit to commission research, and demonstrate how these considerations change the appropriate decision rules in cost-effectiveness analysis. Importantly, we identify those circumstances in which the approval of a technology that is expected to be costeffective should be withheld, i.e. when an 'only in research' recommendation should be made. We demonstrate that a sufficient condition for immediate adoption of a technology can provide incentives for manufacturers to reduce the price or provide additional supporting evidence. However, decisions based solely on expected net benefit provide no such incentives, may undermine the evidence base for future clinical practice and reduce expected net health benefits for the patient population.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Abslract. Higher education in Britain, which until recently had been allowed to conduct its affairs with minimal governmental direction, is now being subjected to increasing pressures resulting from governmental policy decisions, especially regarding public accountability. Such decisions have the ef
## Abstract This study examined developmental change in young children's moral judgments of commission and omission related to mental states, especially __knowledge__ or __ignorance__. 4β5 and 5β to 6βyearβolds (__n=__67) made moral judgments about the tasks related to the understanding of __knowle