Publications by authors named "Peter Neumann"

Article Synopsis
  • - Caregivers play a crucial role in supporting individuals with serious health conditions, but this responsibility can lead to various financial, physical, and emotional challenges for them.
  • - Health technology assessment (HTA) agencies usually focus on patient outcomes while neglecting the impact on caregivers, which can result in suboptimal health benefits for the overall system.
  • - A proposed framework based on the intensity and duration of caregiving aims to help researchers and decision-makers incorporate caregiver outcomes into health policies, highlighting the necessity of acknowledging caregiver burden.
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Bees are crucial for food security and biodiversity. However, managed bees are increasingly considered drivers of wild bee declines, leading to stakeholder conflicts and restrictive policies. We propose avenues to reconcile wild and managed bee proponents and point out knowledge gaps that hinder the development of evidence-based policies.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Researchers conducted an experiment to see if the timing of exposure (during the brood or adult stage) to neonicotinoids influenced HPG development.
  • * Results showed that exposure during the brood stage significantly impaired HPG development, leading to smaller glands that could reduce the efficiency of nurse bees in caring for the colony.
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This study argues that value assessment conducted from a societal perspective should rely on the Generalized Cost-Effectiveness Analysis (GCEA) framework proposed herein. Recently developed value assessment inventories - such as the Second Panel on Cost-Effectiveness's "impact inventory" and International Society of Pharmacoeconomics Outcomes Research (ISPOR) "value flower" - aimed to more comprehensively capture the benefits and costs of new health technologies from a societal perspective. Nevertheless, application of broader value elements in practice has been limited in part because quantifying these elements can be complex, but also because there have been numerous methodological advances since these value inventories have been released (e.

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Article Synopsis
  • The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 mandates Medicare to negotiate drug prices, allowing negotiations for small-molecule drugs nine years after FDA approval and for biologics thirteen years postapproval.
  • A comparison of small-molecule drugs and biologics from 1999-2018 showed similar incremental quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gains, but significant differences in costs and cost-effectiveness.
  • Small-molecule drugs had lower additional costs and better cost-effectiveness ratios compared to biologics, suggesting a potential need for equalizing negotiation timelines for both types of drugs.
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Emerging infectious diseases pose a threat to pollinators. Virus transmission among pollinators via flowers may be reinforced by anthropogenic land-use change and concomitant alteration of plant-pollinator interactions. Here, we examine how species' traits and roles in flower-visitation networks and landscape-scale factors drive key honeybee viruses-black queen cell virus (BQCV) and deformed wing virus-in 19 wild bee and hoverfly species, across 12 landscapes varying in pollinator-friendly (flower-rich) habitat.

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Purpose: Traditional value assessment frameworks are challenged in comprehensively assessing the societal value new therapies bring to individuals with rare, progressive, genetic, fatal, neuromuscular diseases such as Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). The objective of this study was to identify how value assessment frameworks may need to be adapted to measure the value to society of DMD therapies.

Patients And Methods: Three stakeholder groups (6 patient advocates, 4 clinicians, 3 health economists; N = 13) participated in semi-structured interviews around the International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research's Value Flower, which includes elements to consider within value assessments of healthcare technologies.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study evaluates ultraorphan drugs, which are treatments for very rare diseases, focusing on their health benefits, costs, and cost-effectiveness compared to drugs for more common illnesses.
  • It analyzed FDA-approved drugs from 1999 to 2019, determining incremental health gains in quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) and costs, excluding studies funded by manufacturers for objectivity.
  • The findings reveal that ultraorphan drugs provide greater health benefits and higher costs compared to both nonorphan and other orphan drugs, leading to much higher incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs).
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Virus spillovers from managed honey bees, Apis mellifera, are thought to contribute to the decline of wild pollinators, including bumble bees. However, data on the impact of such viruses on wild pollinators remain scarce, and the influence of landscape structure on virus dynamics is poorly understood. In this study, we deployed bumble bee colonies in an agricultural landscape and studied changes in the bumble bee virome during field placement under varying habitat composition and configuration using a multiscale analytical framework.

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The spread of invasive species often follows a jump-dispersal pattern. While jumps are typically fostered by humans, local dispersal can occur due to the specific traits of a species, which are often poorly understood. This holds true for small hive beetles (Aethina tumida), which are parasites of social bee colonies native to sub-Saharan Africa.

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The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services' coverage with evidence development (CED) policy allows the agency to provide coverage for an item or service through a National Coverage Determination (NCD), conditional upon an agreement to collect evidence designed to address specific questions or uncertainties. The goals of this policy are to expedite beneficiary access to new items and services and to generate additional evidence on the impact of these items or services for Medicare beneficiaries. However, these goals have not been fully realized because of several issues with the way the policy has been implemented, including (1) a lack of clear criteria for when CED will be applied, (2) examples of CED data collection activities placing unnecessary burdens on clinicians and the potential for undue inducement on beneficiaries, and (3) a lack of clarity around the process and timeline for reconsidering and ending CED requirements.

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In eusocial insects, worker longevity is essential to ensure colony survival in brood-free periods. Trade-offs between longevity and other traits may render long-living workers in brood-free periods more susceptible to pesticides compared to short-lived ones. Further, colony environment (e.

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Introduction: Studies have reported health-related quality-of-life impacts of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD); however, further research is needed to understand how those with DMD experience their condition and how psychosocial impacts evolve over time in response to disease progression. This qualitative study explores the social and emotional implications of key transitions, challenges and adaptations throughout the disease course from the perspective of patients and family caregivers.

Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with men and boys with DMD, and/or their caregivers, in the USA.

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Objectives: Critics of quality-adjusted life-years argue that it discriminates against older individuals. However, little empirical evidence has been produced to inform this debate. This study aimed to compare published cost-effectiveness analyses (CEAs) on patients aged ≥65 years and those aged <65 years.

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Article Synopsis
  • Health technology assessment (HTA) for pharmaceuticals, especially rare disease treatments, involves complexities and uncertainties due to faster approval processes.
  • Real-world evidence (RWE) is being proposed to support HTA decisions, but its collection and application come with significant methodological challenges.
  • The paper emphasizes the importance of rigorous study design and analysis in using RWE, and offers suggestions to enhance its effectiveness in HTA, highlighting its growing role in determining coverage and pricing.
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Objectives: There is increasing interest in expanding the elements of value to be considered when making health policy decisions. To help inform value frameworks, this study quantified preferences for disease attributes in a general public sample and examined which combination of attributes (disease profiles) are considered most important for research and treatment.

Methods: A discrete choice experiment (DCE) was conducted in a US general population sample, recruited through online consumer panels.

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Invasive vectors can induce dramatic changes in disease epidemiology. While viral emergence following geographical range expansion of a vector is well known, the influence a vector can have at the level of the host's pathobiome is less well understood. Taking advantage of the formerly heterogeneous spatial distribution of the ectoparasitic mite that acts as potent virus vector among honeybees , we investigated the impact of its recent global spread on the viral community of honeybees in a retrospective study of historical samples.

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Western honeybee populations, Apis mellifera, in Europe have been known to survive infestations of the ectoparasitic mite, Varroa destructor, by means of natural selection. Proposed mechanisms in literature have been focused on the management of this parasite, however literature remains scare on the differences in viral ecology between colonies that have adapted to V. destructor and those that are consistently treated for it.

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Background: The progression of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is characterized by loss of ambulation, respiratory insufficiency, cardiomyopathy, and early mortality. DMD profoundly impacts health-related quality-of-life (HRQoL). However, few health state utility data exist; published utilities tend to be derived from small samples for a limited number of health states and are often based on caregiver-reported patient health status.

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Background: Older adults with dementia including Alzheimer's disease may have difficulty communicating their treatment preferences and thus may receive intensive end-of-life (EOL) care that confers limited benefits.

Objective: This study compared the use of life-sustaining interventions during the last 90 days of life among Medicare beneficiaries with and without dementia.

Methods: This cohort study utilized population-based national survey data from the 2000-2016 Health and Retirement Study linked with Medicare and Medicaid claims.

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Background: Professional roles within a hospital system may influence attitudes behind clinical decisions.

Objective: To determine participants' preferences about clinical decisions that either value equal health care access or efficiency.

Design: Deidentified survey asking participants to choose between offering a low-cost screening test to a whole population ("equal access") or a more sensitive, expensive test that could be given to only half of the population but resulting in 10% more avoided deaths ("efficient").

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