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Using Expert Elicitation to Adjust Published Intervention Effects to Reflect the Local Context.

Jodi GrayTilenka R ThynneVaughn EatonRebecca LarcombeMahsa TantiongcoJonathan Karnon
Published in: MDM policy & practice (2024)
Local health services make limited use of economic evaluation to inform their decisions on the funding of new health service interventions. One barrier to use is the relevance of published intervention evaluations to the local setting.Expert elicitation methods provide a structured way to consider differences between the evaluation and local settings and to explicitly and transparently adjust published effect estimates for use in local economic evaluations.The pragmatic elicitation methods reported in this article offer a feasible and acceptable approach to adjusting published intervention effects to better reflect the effects expected in the local context. This increases the relevance of economic evaluations for local decision makers.
Keyphrases
  • randomized controlled trial
  • physical activity
  • systematic review