Title: Phaedra Corso, Ph'D'
1Program Evaluation from an Economic Perspective
Phaedra Corso, Ph.D. Associate
Professor College of Public Health University of
Georgia
2Why Care About Economics in the Context of
Prevention?
- Maximizing outcomes is important.
- Minimizing costs is important too.
- Resources are limited, so hard (resource
allocation) decisions must be made. - Demonstrates the value provided from the
resources expended (return on investment).
3The PH Model for Prevention Economics?
Problem Identification
Risk and Protective Factor Identification
Program and Policy Development
Economic Impact - COI
Program and Policy Evaluation
Implementation and Dissemination
Economic Evaluation
4EE Methods
- Partial evaluation costs only
- Cost of illness (COI) analysis
- Cost analysis (program costs)
- Full evaluation costs and outcomes
- Cost-benefit analysis (CBA)
- Cost-utility analysis (CUA)
- Cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA)
5COI Analysis
- Estimates total costs incurred because of a
disease or condition - (i.e., medical costs, non-medical costs,
productivity losses) - Generally reported as
- annual total cost
- average per person lifetime cost
- Used to show potential benefits of prevention
efforts
6Costs of Violence in the United States
7Cost Parameters
- Direct costs
- Medical care
- ED visits
- Hospitalizations
- Ambulance/paramedic
- MD visits
- Dental
- Physical Therapy
- Prescription Drugs
- Mental health care
- Productivity losses
- Work losses
- Household productivity losses
8Incidence
- 2.2. million medically-treated injuries
associated with violence occurred in 2000 - 17,000 homicides, 30,000 suicides
- People aged 15 to 44 years comprise 44 percent of
the population, but account for nearly 75 percent
of violent injuries
9Costs
- The total cost associated with nonfatal injuries
and deaths due to violence in 2000 was more than
70 billion. - 37 billion for interpersonal violence
- 33 billion for self-inflicted violence
- The average cost per homicide was 1.3 million in
lost productivity and 4,906 in medical costs. - The average cost per case for a non-fatal assault
resulting in hospitalization was 57,209 in lost
productivity and 24,353 in medical costs. - The average cost per case of suicide is 1
million lost productivity and 2,596 in medical
costs. - The average cost for a non-fatal self inflicted
injury was 9,726 in lost productivity and 7,234
in medical costs.
10So What?
- The incidence and economic burden of injuries in
the US is substantial - This information can be used to lobby for more
prevention resources - Implementation of effective interventions could
reduce this burden - The cost to implement effective interventions
less the economic burden prevented represents
the potential returns on investment for
prevention. - This is what economic evaluation
is all about!!
11Cost Analysis (CA)
- Estimates total costs of running a program
- Costs are the value of the resources (people,
building, equipment and supplies) used to produce
a good or a service - Important for realizing costs from varying
perspectives - e.g., incurred by program, incurred by
participant - Includes not just financial, but also economic
costs. - Important for budget justification, decision
making, and forecasting. - Also called cost consequence or cost
identification analysis - Provides the first step of a full economic
evaluation
12Cost Analysis of a national replication of a
child maltreatment program
- Corso et al., CDC, OCAN (in progress)
13Define Cost Categories
14Preliminary Results at end of Year 1
- The average cost per family referral ranged from
2,319 to 8,906. - The average cost per family receiving services
ranged from 4,238 to 33,742. - At the end of the first year of implementation,
pre-implementation costs as a percentage of total
costs ranged from 23 to 42 of the total costs
of the program.
15So What?
- Provides information for Agency X who might want
to implement the program in the future. - Provides the cost component of a full EE.
- Lessons learned on how to conduct a programmatic
CA - Prospective data collection
- Input from site implementers
- Technical assistance throughout data collection
- Revisions of cost collection templates along the
way
Reference Applying Cost Analysis to Public
Health Programs (at www.phf.org)
16What is Economic Evaluation (EE)?
- Applied analytic methods to
- Identify,
- Measure,
- Value, and
- Compare
- the costs and consequences of
- treatment and prevention strategies.
Done a lot Done not so much
17Cost-benefit Analysis - CBA
- A method used to compare costs and benefits of an
intervention - where all the costs and benefits are standardized
or valued in monetary terms. - Provides a list of all costs and benefits over
time - Can have different time lines
- Can have different amounts at different times
- Provides a single value
- Net Benefits NB (Benefits Costs)
18When is CBA Used?
- To decide whether to implement specific programs
- If NB gt 0, implement
- When choosing among competing options
- Implement program with highest NB
- For setting priorities on options given resource
constraints
19Quantify Benefits - CBA
- Cost-of-Illness (COI) approach
- Willingness-to-Pay (WTP) or Contingent-valuation
surveys - (e.g., how much is society willing to pay to
reduce the annual morbidity and mortality risk
associated with a disease or injury)
20Corso Survey (Fall 2007, Georgia)
- Based on national data, 2 out of every 100,000
children annually, or an average of 4 children
every day are killed as a result of child
maltreatment by parents or caretakers.
Now imagine we had a nationally-sponsored child
maltreatment prevention program that was
available to your state and this this program was
proven to reduce the risk of a child being killed
due to child maltreatment by 50. This means
that the number of children killed on average
every day in the U.S. by child maltreatment is
reduced from 4 per day to 2 per day.
If this program were available to your state,
would you be willing to pay 150 in extra taxes
per year to sponsor this program? YES Would
you be willing to pay 225? NO Would you be
willing to pay 75?
21Cost-utility Analysis - CUA
- A method used to compare costs and benefits of
interventions where benefits are expressed as the
number of life years saved adjusted to account
for loss of quality. - Combines
- Length of life (survival), and
- Quality of life
- Compares disparate outcomes in terms of utility
- Quality-adjusted life years (QALYs)
- Disability-adjusted life years (DALYs)
- Derives a ratio of cost per health outcome
- /QALY or /DALY
22When is CUA Used?
- When quality of life is the important outcome.
- When the program affects both morbidity and
mortality. - When the programs being compared have a wide
range of different outcomes. - When the program is being compared with a program
that has already been evaluated using CUA.
23Quantify Benefits - CUA
- Utilities are
- A preference-based measure of health, that
relies on choice and uncertainty to elicit
preferences - Typically based on a 0 (death) to 1 (perfect
health) scale
24Example of Tool to Elicit Utilities Time
Trade-Off (TTO)
Which life do you prefer?
Quality of Life
Short and fun
Long and dull
Length of Life
25Example TTO
healthy
Utility
U(healthy) 1.0
blind both eyes
U (blind both eyes) ?
Dead
Years
0
20
12
26Combining Quality of Life with Length of Life
Utility
without prevention
with prevention
1.0
0.7
Years
0
75
30
QALYS (with prevention) 1.075 75 QALYS
(without prevention) 0.730 21
27Cost-effectiveness Analysis - CEA
- Estimates costs and outcomes of interventions
- Expresses outcomes in natural units
- e.g., cases prevented, lives saved
- Compares results with other interventions
affecting the same outcome - Summary measure cost-effectiveness ratio
- Cost per some outcome achieved
- e.g., cost per case prevented, cost per life
saved -
-
28When is CEA Used?
- Used to identify
- most cost-effective strategy from options that
produce a common effect - practices that are not worth their costs
- Used for empirical support for under-funded
- programs
29Quantify Outcomes CEA of parenting intervention
- Intermediate outcomes
- Increased child self-esteem and mental health
status - Increased family cohesiveness/coping skills
- Decreased depression in parents
- Final outcomes
- QOL improvements in parents and children
- Child maltreatment cases prevented
- Lives or life years saved
30CEA Caveat
- Outcomes cannot be combined, so one or two of the
most important effectiveness measures should be
considered (separately) for the CEA. - The number of summary measures depends on the
number of outcomes chosen. - If 2 outcomes, A and B, are considered the most
important for evaluation, then - Cost/outcome A
- Cost/outcome B
- This makes translation for policy makers
difficult!!
31Example CM Prevention ProgramAverage CE Ratios
for depressive symptoms
Compared to baseline
32Final Comments
- Economic evaluation (EE) is valuable to decision
making and for setting health policy. - For new researchers in PH, this is an important
specialization to consider because the demand
for these skills is growing.
33Coming soon.. Center for Economic
Evaluation Institute for Behavioral Research
and College of Public Health pcorso_at_uga.edu