Health Economics and Technology
Health Economics and Technology
Health Economics and Technology
ON
HEALTH ECONOMICS
&
HEALTH TECHNOLOGY
SUBMITTED ON:
15.06.2021
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INDEX
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S.NO CONTENT PAGE.NO
01 HEALTH ECONOMICS
i. Introduction 01
ii. Health 01
iii. Economics 01
iv. Health economics 01
v. Aim of health economics 01
vi. Principles of Health Economics 01-03
vii. Economic analysis 03-05
viii. Benefits 06
IX. Major problems in health financing 07
x. Role of nurse in health economics 07-08
02 HEALTH TECHNOLOGY
Technology 08
Health technology 08
Purpose 08
Areas of health technology can be formulated 09
Health technologies are essential when they 09
Basic health technology assessment Orientations 10-11
Ten basic steps of health technology assessment 11
Health Technology Assessment Programme (HTAP) 12
Health technology and decision making 13
Properties and impact assessed 13
Utilization of health technology 13
Benefits of health technology 13
03 Summary 13
04 Conclusion 13-14
05 Journal abstract 14-15
05 Reference 15-16
SEMINAR CONTENT
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Subject Community Health Nursing -I
Unit II - Health
Topic Health economics and Health technology.
Method of Teaching Lecture cum Discussion
AV Aids Power point presentation, chart, pamphlet, whiteboard,
handouts, flannel graphs
Date
Time
Objectives
General objectives
Through this the student will be able to develop in-depth knowledge on health
economics and health technology , apply this knowledge in providing health care services in
the community with desirable attitude effectively.
Specific objectives
At the end of the teaching the student will be able to:
Define health economics
Describe the Aims of health economics
List the types of economic analysis in health
Mention some major problems in health financing
Discuss Role of nurse in health economics
Define health technology
State the purpose of health technology
Discuss the Areas of health technology can be formulated
Describe health technology assessment
Classify basic health technology assessment orientation
List down the Ten basic steps of health technology assessment
State the health technology assessment program
Interpret the health technology and decision making
Enlist the benefits of health technology
HEALTH ECONOMICS
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Introduction
Health economics generally deals with the purpose and planning of budgeting which
is required to be done in the health care delivery system for providing care.
Health
Health is a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely
the absence of disease or infirmity.
Economics
It has been variously described as the study of wealth, study of welfare and study of
scarcity.
Health economics
It is the discipline that determines the price and the quantity of limited financial and
nonfinancial resources devoted to the care of the sick and promotion of health.
Principles
a) Microeconomics
b) Macroeconomics
Microeconomics
It deals with the behaviors of the individuals and organizations and the effects of those
behaviors on prices, costs, and the allocating and distributing resources.
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Supply and demand
Factors
Effectiveness Efficiency
These both factors are interrelated to each other because if there is no demand
then there is no supply, but if there is good demand then there is a good supply and the cost
of demanding objects will be higher.
b. Efficiency:
c. Effectiveness:
It refers to the extent which a health care services meets a stated goal or
objective, or how well a program or service.
Macroeconomics
It deals with the large- scale or general economic factors, such as interest rates
and national productivity.
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Gross National Gross Domestic
FACTORS Product
Product
----------------The National Product and Gross Domestic Product are the conventional terms
used to understand the performance of the economy.
a. Personal consumption
b. Expenditure of goods and services
c. Investment expenditure.
GNP & GDP serves as measures of total production of goods and services in a country during
year.
Economic analysis:
Cost
minimization
Cost Cost benefit
ECONOMIC Cost
Poverty line
ANALYSIS effectiveness
a) Cost- minimization:
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In this the inputs are compared and outputs are considered to be equal, which rarely
so.
b) Cost benefit:
c) Cost effectiveness:
d) Cost utility:
e) Scarcity:
Scarcity exists to all walks of life. The health needs are infinite whereas the resources
f) Demand:
It is, the type, quantity and quality of services or commodities wanted or requested.
But the demand for health and medical care in strict economic sense, is a function of:
Consumer’s income,
The price of medical care relative to the prices of other goods,
Preferences of consumers, including their perceptions about health and health care.
g) Poverty Line:
Poverty line refers to, the cutoff point of income below which people are not able to purchase
food sufficient to provide 2400 kcal per head per day.
h) Cost:
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It refers to the resources which are spent in carrying out health activities so far as the health
care sector is concerned.
1. Capital costs:
These costs are borne irrespective of the workload of any health center and are
fixed. These may include- Building, i.e. the health center, hospital.
2. Operating costs:
These costs are related to the level or type of activity in a health institution. Some
operating costs will change daily and some from year to year.
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Technology advances: Modern society has become to expect miraculous technological
advances. Now 50% of the population consuming 80% of the health care resources.
4. Benefit:
The benefits of health program or project are the desired effects of the program.
Health planning,
Health management, and
Evaluation,
i.Budget
It incorporates politically and technically determine in what way and for what purpose
various health resources are to be used.
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ii.Health Financing
It refers to the raising of resources to pay for goods and services related to health.
These resources may be in the form of “cash” or “kind”.
Lack of funds.
Unequal distribution of health finances.
Rising health costs.
Lack of coordination of health financing units.
Wastage and in sufficiency in spending the funds or resources available.
Medicare:
It was intended to provide health care to the growing population of those 65 years of
age and older.
Medicaid:
It provides universal health care coverage for the indigent and children.
Priority participation is given to children, pregnant women, and the disabled.
Nurses play a central role in cost containment, care quality, and patient safety.
Nurses actively engages in leading efforts to improve patient care and reduce costs.
Health care Issues and Trends
Governing on Behalf of Stakeholders.
Monitoring Financial Performance.
Building a Culture of Quality and Safety.
Monitoring Quality Performance.
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Set policy that guides care delivery.
Set strategy to help ensure the future health of a vital community resource.
Assume a valued community leadership role.
Help the boards identify, clarify, and focus on the wants and needs of the patients.
Share patient needs and concerns and ensure.
HEALTH TECHNOLOGY
Technology
The branch of knowledge that deals with the creation and use of technical means and
their interrelation with life, society, and the environment, drawing upon such subjects as
industrial arts, engineering, applied science, and pure science.
Health technology
Purpose
a) Develop and maintain basic operational frameworks for safe and reliable health
services and technologies.
b) Help Member States complete the basic operational frameworks through project
proposals prepared by Member States.
c) Develop norms and standards, guidelines, training materials, reference materials and
estimation of burden of disease.
d) Focus on diseases of the poor.
Areas of health technology can be formulated:
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The main purpose of HTA is to inform policymaking for technology in health care, where
policymaking is used in the broad sense to include decisions made at, e.g., the individual or
patient level, the level of the health care provider or institution, or at the regional, national
and international levels.
BASIC HTA
ORIENTATIONS
Project- Problem-
oriented oriented
assessments assessments
Technology-oriented assessments: -
These are intended to determine the characteristics or impacts of particular
technologies.
For example, a government agency may want to determine the clinical, economic,
social, professional, or industrial impacts of population based cancer screening,
cochlear implants, or other particular interventions.
Problem-oriented assessments:-
It focuses on solutions or strategies for managing a particular problem for which
alternative or complementary technologies might be used.
For example, clinicians and providers concerned with the problem of diagnosis of
dementia may call for the development of clinical practice guidelines involving some
combination or sequence of clinical history, neurological examination, and diagnostic
imaging using various modalities.
Project-oriented assessments:-
It focus on a local placement or use of a technologyin a particular institution,
program, or other designated project.
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For example, this may arise when a hospital must decide whether or not to purchase a
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) unit, considering the facilities, personnel, and
other resources needed to install and operate an MRI unit; the hospital's financial
status; local market potential for MRI services; competitive factors; etc.
Identify
assessment
topics
Specify the
Monitor
assessment
impacts
problem
Disseminate Determine
findings and locus of
recommenda- assessment
tions
STEPS OF
HTA
Formulate
findings and Retrieve
recommendatio evidence
ns
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Health technology assessment programme (HTAP)
HTA is an innovative program that determines if health services used by state government are
safe and effective.
The primary goals are to make:
a) Health care safer by relying on scientific evidence and a committee of practicing
clinicians.
b) Coverage decisions of state agencies more consistent.
c) State purchased health care more cost effective.
d) Coverage decision process more open and inclusive by sharing information, holding
public meetings, and publishing decision criteria and outcomes.
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Health technology and decision making
Health technology has the tremendous potential to change our understanding of
disease, transform the delivery of healthcare services, and improve health outcomes.
But using such technology comes at a price.
Decisions about whether to purchase and use new technology should be based on
high-quality evidence on its impact on health care and health outcomes.
Health Technologies and Decision Making analyses the barriers to, and facilitators of,
evidence-based decision making in health-care systems
Properties and impact assessed
In general, these include the following.
a) Technical properties
b) Safety
c) Efficacy and/or effectiveness
d) Economic attributes or impacts
e) Social, legal, ethical and/or political impacts
Utilization of health technology
a) Improve health care quality
b) Prevent medical errors
c) Less paper work
d) Reduce health care cost
e) Expand access to affordable care
Benefits of health technology
a) Early detection of burden of disease
b) Evaluate the health care services to see the cost benefit of the health care services
c) Improving to tracking of chronic disease management
summary
Health economics is concerned with issues related to efficiency, effectiveness, values, and
behavior in the production and consumption of health and health care.
Conclusion
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The Health Care Finance Administration today must react expeditiously to rapid advances
and changes made in medical science and technology and define and clarify the benefits
under the Medicare program. This is a challenge because, like all health plans, Medicare
often faces the dilemma of having inadequate data to make evidence-based coverage
decisions for new technologies and services. Agency for Health Care Policy & Research thus
plays a crucial role in providing needed information on medical effectiveness and outcomes,
which assists in the adoption of appropriate coverage policies. This, in turn, serves
beneficiaries by assuring
Journal :
1. The Economics of Public Health: Missing Pieces to the Puzzle of Health System
Reform
The United States continues to experiment with health care delivery and financing
innovations, but relatively little attention is given to the public health system and its
capacity for improving health status in the U.S. population at large. The public health
system operates as a multisector enterprise in which government agencies work in
conjunction with private and voluntary organizations to identify health risks in the
population and to mobilize community-wide actions that prevent and contain these risks.
The Affordable Care Act and related health reform initiatives are generating new interest in
the question of how best to expand and integrate public health approaches into the larger
U.S. health system. The research articles featured in this issue of Health Services Research
cluster around two broad topics: how public health agencies can deliver services efficiently
and how public health agencies can interact productively with other elements of the health
system. The results suggest promising avenues for aligning medical care and public health
practices.
2. New technologies, new disparities: The intersection of electronic health and digital
health literacy
Mobile health, or mHealth, is the implementation of digital health services with mobile
and wearable devices, and has ample potential to enhance self-management of chronic
conditions, especially cardiovascular risk factors (e.g., blood pressure control and
supporting tobacco cessation and physical activity). It remains ambiguous, however,
whether such technologies can improve cardiovascular outcomes. More importantly,
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mHealth carries the additional challenge of digital health literacy, which demands particular
skills complementary to general and health literacy. Populations at risk for limited health
literacy are similarly vulnerable to having challenges with digital health literacy. We
identify such challenges and outline solutions to improve access to digital health services
and their use for individuals with limited digital health literacy. We present an 18-point
"Digital Universal Precautions" as a mandate for health care organizations committed
towards addressing and facilitating eHealth literacy. As health care institutions increasingly
advance mHealth through delivery of on-line material and patient portals, they face the
challenge of ensuring that digital health services and content are available to all patients.
Bibliography:
Book reference:
1. Park. K "PREVENTIVE AND SOCIAL MEDICINE" 19" edition (2012); Bhanot
Publishers.
2. Las S. Textbook of Community Medicine, Preventive and Social Medicine. Fifth edition.
New Delhi, India. CBC Publishers & Distributers Pvt ltd. 2017
3. Kishore J.National Health Programes of India- National policies and Legislations
Relayed to health, Twelfth Edition, New Delhi, India, Century Publications, 2017.
4. Philips CJ. Health Economics an introduction for health professionals. Massachusetts,
USA. Blackwell Publicating Inc.2005
Net reference:
1. https://www.slideshare.net/ancychacko89/health-economics-44873042
2. https://www.slideshare.net/pramodkumarsikarawar/health-economics-66624998
3. https://www.slideshare.net/aparnachaudhary7/concepts-in-health-economics
4. https://www.slideshare.net/pramodkumarsikarawar/health-technology-66625003
5. https://www.slideshare.net/drjayeshpatidar/health-technology
6. https://www.slideshare.net/Biomoda/healthcare-and-information-technology
Journal reference:
1. Mays, G. P., Atherly, A. J., & Zaslavsky, A. M. (2017). The Economics of Public
Health: Missing Pieces to the Puzzle of Health System Reform. Health services research,
52 Suppl 2(Suppl 2), 2275–2284. https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-6773.12782.
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2. Smith, B., & Magnani, J. W. (2019). New technologies, new disparities: The intersection
of electronic health and digital health literacy. International journal of cardiology, 292,
280–282. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2019.05.066.
THANK YOU
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