Health technology assessment and innovation: here to help or hinder?

Int J Technol Assess Health Care

Discipline of Surgery, University of Adelaide, The Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Adelaide, SA, Australia.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Innovative health technologies have great potential for improving patient care, but policy makers are often hesitant to adopt new innovations due to concerns about evidence, costs, and the difficulty of removing technologies once they're integrated.
  • The traditional health technology assessment (HTA) process emphasizes therapeutic value and cost-savings, which may overlook the importance of innovation and its benefits in healthcare.
  • To better support and incentivize innovation, policies should incorporate innovative HTA tools like horizon scanning and multicriteria decision analysis, shifting the focus from costs to investments to enhance patient outcomes, as discussed in the recent Health Technology Assessment International Asia Policy Forum in Taiwan.

Article Abstract

Innovative health technologies offer much to patients, clinicians, and health systems. Policy makers can, however, be slow to embrace innovation for many reasons, including a less robust body of evidence, perceived high costs, and a fear that once technologies enter the health system, they will be difficult to remove. Health technology funding decisions are usually made after a rigorous health technology assessment (HTA) process, including a cost analysis. However, by focusing on therapeutic value and cost-savings, the traditional HTA framework often fails to capture innovation in the assessment process. How HTA defines, evaluates, and values innovation is currently inconsistent, and it is generally agreed that by explicitly defining innovation would recognize and reward and, in turn, stimulate, encourage, and incentivize future innovation in the system. To foster innovation in health technology, policy needs to be innovative and utilize other HTA tools to inform decision making including horizon scanning, multicriteria decision analysis, and funding mechanisms such as managed agreements and coverage with evidence development. When properly supported and incentivized, and by shifting the focus from cost to investment, innovation in health technology such as genomics, point-of-care testing, and digital health may deliver better patient outcomes. Industry and agency members of the Health Technology Assessment International Asia Policy Forum (APF) met in Taiwan in November 2023 to discuss the potential of HTA to foster innovation, especially in the Asia region. Discussions and presentations during the 2023 APF were informed by a background paper, which forms the basis of this paper.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11563175PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S026646232400059XDOI Listing

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