STAR—people-powered prioritization : a 21st-century solution to allocation headaches
Airoldi, Mara and Morton, Alec and Smith, Jenifer and Bevan, Gwyn (2014) STAR—people-powered prioritization : a 21st-century solution to allocation headaches. Medical Decision Making, 34 (8). pp. 965-975. ISSN 0272-989X (https://doi.org/10.1177/0272989X14546376)
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Abstract
The aim of cost effectiveness analysis (CEA) is to inform the allocation of scarce resources. CEA is routinely used in assessing the cost-effectiveness of specific health technologies by agencies such as the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) in England and Wales. But there is extensive evidence that because of barriers of accessibility and acceptability, CEA has not been used by local health planners in their annual task of allocating fixed budgets to a wide range of types of health care. This paper argues that these planners can use Socio Technical Allocation of Resources (STAR) for that task. STAR builds on the principles of CEA and the practice of program budgeting and marginal analysis. STAR uses requisite models to assess the cost-effectiveness of all interventions considered for resource reallocation by explicitly applying the theory of health economics to evidence of scale, costs, and benefits, with deliberation facilitated through an interactive social process of engaging key stakeholders. In that social process, the stakeholders generate missing estimates of scale, costs, and benefits of the interventions; develop visual models of their relative cost-effectiveness; and interpret the results. We demonstrate the feasibility of STAR by showing how it was used by a local health planning agency of the English National Health Service, the Isle of Wight Primary Care Trust, to allocate a fixed budget in 2008 and 2009.
ORCID iDs
Airoldi, Mara, Morton, Alec ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3803-8517, Smith, Jenifer and Bevan, Gwyn;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 50824 Dates: DateEvent1 November 2014Published12 August 2014Published Online16 June 2014AcceptedSubjects: Social Sciences > Industries. Land use. Labor > Management. Industrial Management Department: Strathclyde Business School > Management Science Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 16 Dec 2014 11:26 Last modified: 04 Dec 2024 01:15 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/50824