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Value Frameworks for Vaccines: Which Dimensions Are Most Relevant?

Jeroen LuytenRoselinde KesselsCorinne VandermeulenPhilippe Beutels
Published in: Vaccines (2020)
In addition to more narrow criteria such as safety, effectiveness and cost-effectiveness, vaccines can also be evaluated based on broader criteria such as their economic impact, contribution to disease eradication objectives, caregiver aspects, financial protection offered, equity or social acceptability. We summarize a survey executed in a sample of the population (n = 1000) in Flanders, Belgium, in which we investigated support for using these broader criteria to evaluate vaccines for funding decisions. By means of both favourable and unfavourable framings of a hypothetical vaccine across 40 value dimensions, we find support for the view that people indeed consider a broad range of medical and socio-economic criteria relevant. Several of these are not incorporated in standard evaluation frameworks for vaccines. The different results we find for different framings highlight the importance of developing a consistent a priori value framework for vaccine evaluation, rather than evaluating vaccines on an ad hoc basis.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • randomized controlled trial
  • systematic review
  • high resolution
  • young adults
  • mass spectrometry
  • global health
  • childhood cancer
  • affordable care act