High-value, cost-conscious health care: concepts for clinicians to evaluate the benefits, harms, and costs of medical interventions

Clinical Guidelines Committee of the American College of Physicians, Douglas K Owens, Amir Qaseem, Roger Chou, Paul Shekelle, David S. Weinberg

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

268 Scopus citations

Abstract

Health care costs in the United States are increasing unsustainably, and further efforts to control costs are inevitable and essential. Efforts to control expenditures should focus on the value, in addition to the costs, of health care interventions. Whether an intervention provides high value depends on assessing whether its health benefits justify its costs. High-cost interventions may provide good value because they are highly beneficial; conversely, low-cost interventions may have little or no value if they provide little benefit. Thus, the challenge becomes determining how to slow the rate of increase in costs while preserving high-value, high-quality care. A first step is to decrease or eliminate care that provides no benefit and may even be harmful. A second step is to provide medical interventions that provide good value: medical benefits that are commensurate with their costs. This article discusses 3 key concepts for understanding how to assess the value of health care interventions. First, assessing the benefits, harms, and costs of an intervention is essential to understand whether it provides good value. Second, assessing the cost of an intervention should include not only the cost of the intervention itself but also any downstream costs that occur because the intervention was performed. Third, the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio estimates the additional cost required to obtain additional health benefits and provides a key measure of the value of a health care intervention.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)174-80
Number of pages7
JournalAnnals of Internal Medicine
Volume154
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 2011

Keywords

  • Benchmarking
  • Comparative Effectiveness Research
  • Cost Control
  • Cost-Benefit Analysis
  • Defibrillators, Implantable/economics
  • Drug Costs
  • Health Care Costs
  • Health Care Reform/economics
  • Humans
  • Quality of Health Care/economics
  • Quality-Adjusted Life Years
  • United States

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