1 / 15

Health Economics & Policy 3 rd Edition James W. Henderson

Health Economics & Policy 3 rd Edition James W. Henderson. Chapter 13 Technology in Medicine. The Diffusion of New Technology. The economics of technological change Cost-increasing technological change Cost-decreasing technological change Levels of technology Non-technology

Télécharger la présentation

Health Economics & Policy 3 rd Edition James W. Henderson

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Health Economics & Policy3rd EditionJames W. Henderson Chapter 13 Technology in Medicine

  2. The Diffusion of New Technology • The economics of technological change • Cost-increasing technological change • Cost-decreasing technological change • Levels of technology • Non-technology • Halfway technology • High technology • Role of insurance in the diffusion of technology

  3. Effect of Technological Change on Cost

  4. High-cost Medicine • Heart disease • Angioplasty • CABGS • Heart transplantation • Infertility treatment • IUI • IVF • GIFT

  5. Organ Transplantation • History • Current policy • Market for organs • Supply and demand for organs • Property rights • U.S. policy—required request • Britain—contract in provision of organs • Rest of Europe—presumed consent

  6. Number of U.S. Transplants

  7. Cost of Transplant Surgery, 1990

  8. Market for Kidneys, 1998

  9. The Pharmaceutical Industry • Structure of the industry • Basic research – supported by NIH labs and grants • Applied research – looking to development of marketable drug • 284 new drug approvals from 1990-99, 265 originated from industry, 9 from government, and 10 from academia

  10. Risk in Development • DiMasi et al. (2003) examined 538 investigational drugs first tested in humans between 1983-94 • Approved for marketing (84) • Submitted to FDA, but not approved (9) • Submitted to FDA, but abandoned (5) • Human testing terminated < 4 years (227) • Human testing terminated > 4 years (172) • Human testing active 3/31/01 (43)

  11. R&D Process in Pharmaceuticals • Preclinical • Clinical • Phase I – health volunteers to study safety profile, including toxicity, absorption, etc. • Phase II – controlled placebo studies looking at efficacy and safety • Phase III – large scale testing looking at effectiveness and safety • Animal testing – long-term toxicity experiments during clinical phase • FDA review

  12. Steps in Pharmaceutical R&D

  13. Regulating Drug Prices • The economics of drug pricing • Price controls in the U.S. and abroad • Danzon (1996) • Role of generics • Impact of price controls on new drug development

  14. Research v. Promotion

  15. Summary and Conclusions • Technological imperative • Future of biotechnology

More Related