Login / Signup

Why cost-effectiveness thresholds for global health donors should differ from thresholds for Ministries of Health (and why it matters).

Tom DrakeY-Ling ChiAlexander D MortonCatherine Pitt
Published in: F1000Research (2024)
Healthcare cost-effectiveness analysis is increasingly used to inform priority-setting in low- and middle-income countries and by global health donors. As part of such analyses, cost-effectiveness thresholds are commonly used to determine what is, or is not, cost-effective. Recent years have seen a shift in best practice from a rule-of-thumb 1x or 3x per capita GDP threshold towards using thresholds that, in theory, reflect the opportunity cost of new investments within a given country. In this paper, we observe that international donors face both different resource constraints and opportunity costs compared to national decision-makers. Hence, their perspective on cost-effectiveness thresholds must be different. We discuss the potential implications of distinguishing between national and donor thresholds and outline broad options for how to approach setting a donor-perspective threshold. Further work is needed to clarify healthcare cost-effectiveness threshold theory in the context of international aid and to develop practical policy frameworks for implementation.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • global health
  • public health
  • quality improvement
  • primary care
  • mental health
  • health information
  • risk assessment
  • human health
  • health insurance