Title: The challenge of disinvestment
1The challenge of disinvestment
- Kalipso Chalkidou
- Research and Development
- NICE
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
2Good intentions
- With all the excellent developments in medicine
that are becoming available, it is not in
anyone's interest to waste money on treatments
that do not provide good value for money NICE
is going to provide authoritative advice to help
us make the best use of the resources available
to the NHS. - Frank Dobson, Secretary of State for Health,
speech launching NICE, March 1999 - ACTS Definitions and Criteria Does the proposed
guidance relate to one or more interventions
which could, without detriment to patient care,
be used more selectively, thus freeing up
resources for use elsewhere in the NHS?
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
3Limited impact?
- There are some good examples
- appraisals on the removal of wisdom teeth and
proton pump inhibitors - guidelines on the management of heavy menstrual
bleeding, caesarean section and LARC - but
- Clear bias in favour of new technologies
- Few disinvestment topics actually referred to
NICE - Rationale for referral not explicitly stated in
the guidance remit - Limited evidence base for established treatments
- Resistance to withdrawing existing technologies
- National tariff uplift 2005/06 389m (0.9)
- Specific adjustments to HRGs
- approx 800-1,200m overall impact
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
4Waste not, want not
- NICE should be
- asked to issue guidance to the NHS
- on disinvestment, away from established
- interventions that are no longer appropriate
- or effective, or do not provide value for money.
- CMO Annual Report, 2005
- "NICE has an excellent track record in
identifying and recommending the most effective
new treatments. But we need to ensure that we
balance this with better advice on unnecessary
and ineffective interventions that can be
stopped." - Andy Burnham, Sep 2006
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
5Can cost inflating be cost-effective?
- Develop cost-effective public health guidance
reduce clinical need fully engaged scenario - Set realistic threshold reflecting ICERs of
services currently introduced or discontinued at
the local level, assuming a rational
prioritisation process, informed by economic
evidence, exists - Identify, evaluate and recommend against ongoing
cost-ineffective practices set up a
disinvestment agenda - Influence strategic research priorities to reduce
uncertainty and prevent decision reversal and
sunk costs
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
6NICE disinvestment activities
- Recommendation reminders
- Commissioners guides
- Using existing NICE programmes
- Establishing dedicated disinvestment streams
- Topic selection
- A disinvestment related research agenda
- Working with external partners
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
7Recommendation Reminders
- Existing NICE guidance
- Still relevant to the NHS clinical expert input
- Additional costing tools
- Over 250 single do not do recommendations
between 1999-2005 - Lesson 1 the press release matters!
- Lesson 2 baseline hard (impossible?) to define
lack of data - Lesson 3 some people do not want to be reminded
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
8Commissioners Guides
- Not dedicated disinvestment tool
- Aimed at supporting evidence-based effective
commissioning - Building on NICE costing tools/budget impact
analysis - Examples upper GI endoscopy, foot care for
diabetes, anticoagulation, management of COPD - Commissioning guides are not
- advice on how to commission
- new formal NICE guidance
- fixed can be adjusted to local setting
- Web-based accessible to PCTs and practices in
England
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
9Topic selection
- Increased responsibility of NICE in topic
selection - No separate disinvestment consideration panel
- Consider
- variation in practice,
- current usage and potential real savings,
- substitute technology/pathway,
- feasibility of change in practice,
- effect on inequalities(?)
- Sometimes, disinvestment topics result in
investment recommendations
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
10Using existing NICE programmes
- Target wasteful practice at the scoping stage
- Encourage guidance developers to think about
waste - Improve communication of do not do
recommendations - PET, structural MRI, magnetic resonance
volumetry and magnetic resonance spectometry
should not be used in the differential diagnosis
of parkinsonian syndromes, except in the context
of clinical trials. Parkinsons disease, NICE
Clinical Guideline, London, June 2006 - The use of multi-channel cystometry, ambulatory
urodynamics or videourodynamics is not
recommended before starting conservative
treatment. The management of urinary
incontinence in women, NICE Clinical Guideline,
London, October 2006
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
11New disinvestment streams
- Same methodology of economic evaluation
- Focus on identification of relevant topics
- Key areas
- Service reconfiguration but the evidence base
is different - Inappropriate use of antibiotics chloramphenicol
for conjunctivitis, tetracyclines for acne and
topical corticosteroid/antimicrobial combinations - Grommets
- Diagnostic tests
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
12Research and disinvestment atopic eczema
- What we said
- It is recommended that topical corticosteroids
should be prescribed for application only once or
twice daily. - What we do not know
- Is once-daily use of the older twice-daily
products equivalent to the once-daily-only
products of the same potency? - What we said
- Topical tacrolimus and pimecrolimus are not
recommended for the treatment of mild eczema or
as first-line treatments for eczema of any
severity. - What we do not know
- What are the long-term effects of tacrolimus and
pimecrolimus? - How do these drugs compare with appropriate
potencies of topical corticosteroids?
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
13Cooksey Report
- The Review recommends that funding be identified
and formal arrangements be established between
NHS RD and NICE in order to implement NICE
recommendations calling on the NHS to use health
interventions in a research context - Value-based pricing for new technologies
- Continuous evaluation through registries and
databases for established treatments - Implementation of public health and clinical
guidelines recommendations only in research - Methods for developing disinvestment guidance
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
14Partner organisations
- Cochrane Collaboration
- Association of Public Health Observatories
- NHS Institute
- NHS information centre and other databases
- Welsh HIRU
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
15The challenges of substitution
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
16Evidential and methodological
- Selecting the right topics
- What is the comparator?
- Weak evidence base for established treatments
- Guidance developers reluctant to stop current
practice - No sponsor and little incentive for more
research - Are savings real(isable)?
- Economic vs costing model defining opportunity
cost - Extrapolating over long time horizons
- Establishing the baseline
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
17Implementation
- What happens with the savings Choosing Health vs
chemo? - The kinkiness of the SW quadrant
- NICE-specific
- Centralised advise often insensitive to local
setting - NICE does not look at everything what about
activities below the baseline?
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
18and other!
- Single technology appraisal getting the
comparator/timing right - Substituting new technologies for preventative
interventions lowering the threshold? - 3 month implementation directive and the
health-wealth trade-off
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
19Way forward
- NICE can
- Help manage pressures
- Trigger a public debate and help bring about a
mentality change - Encourage necessary research and evidence
generation - Produce more evidence-based disinvestment advice
and less budget-inflating recommendations - But we can do more
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
20How can NICE really add value?
- Empower commissioners and consumers (PCTs,
GPspatients) - Provide access to
- evidence-based
- need-adjusted
- comparative rates for benchmarking
- Elicit patient and professional input
- Move away from centralised intervention-specific
do not do guidance - commissioners' guides
- tailored guidance (?)
- evidence base for contract exclusion agenda (?)
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
21Its the data,!
22surgery drugs diagnostics disease
management prevention health promotion
NICE guidance
Guidance development stages
- Topic selection
- Scoping
- Guidance development
- Evidence gaps
- Budget impact
- Implementation support
- Guidance review
- Guidance uptake and impact assessment
BoD, variation, evidence base, trend
data Prevalence/incidence, current practice,
comparators Baseline risk, resource use, QoL,
long-term follow up, subgroup analysis,
generalisability of effect Ongoing studies,
only in research when high uncertainty, high
priority research questions Unit costs, PCT/SHA
demographics, service activity, prescribing and
workforce data Examples of good practice,
existing networks, relevant policy
initiatives New evidence on long term costs,
efficacy, safety, alternatives Prescribing (by
indication) and activity data, barriers,
frontline substitution threshold, relating
spending to health outcomes
23Lack of datastill useful?
- Evidence of lack of effectiveness vs lack of
evidence of effectiveness - Inform strategic research priorities
- Support commissioning
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
24CEA in the NICE context is not a panacea
- We need access to longitudinal data on variation
coupled with robust local prioritisation
processes - Fisher et al, Ann Intern Med, 2003 Skinner et
al, Health Affairs, 2006
- NICE has operated during the halcyon days of an
unprecedented period of sustained growth in the
overall NHS budget, a rate of growth that cannot
continue indefinitely. When budgets cease to
grow, a new day will dawn for NICE and the NHS as
they manage the delicate balance between
cost-effective new technologies and local health
authority budgets. - Pearson and Rawlins, JAMA, November 2005
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007
25Thank you!
ESRC Seminar Series March 2007