Journal article
Why equal treatment is not always equitable: The impact of existing ethnic health inequalities in cost-effectiveness modeling
M McLeod, T Blakely, G Kvizhinadze, R Harris
Population Health Metrics | BMC | Published : 2014
Abstract
Background: A critical first step toward incorporating equity into cost-effectiveness analyses is to appropriately model interventions by population subgroups. In this paper we use a standardized treatment intervention to examine the impact of using ethnic-specific (Māori and non-Māori) data in cost-utility analyses for three cancers. Methods: We estimate gains in health-adjusted life years (HALYs) for a simple intervention (20% reduction in excess cancer mortality) for lung, female breast, and colon cancers, using Markov modeling. Base models include ethnic-specific cancer incidence with other parameters either turned off or set to non-Māori levels for both groups. Subsequent models add eth..
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Awarded by Health Research Council of New Zealand