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ECON8075 Economic Evaluation of Health Programs

Offered By School of Economics
Academic Career Graduate Coursework
Course Subject Economics
Offered in Second Semester, 2010 and Second Semester, 2011
Unit Value 6 units
Course Description
  • Welfare foundations of cost-benefit analysis
    The Pareto criterion and other welfare criteria; market failure and non-market decision-making; social welfare functions
  • The monetary value of health changes
    Private willingness-to-pay under certainty; health risks and the valuation of health under uncertainty; altruistic willingness-to-pay.
  • The resource consequences of health changes
    Valuing resource consequences due to changes in morbidity and mortality in a private system under conditions of certainty and uncertainty; valuing resource consequences in a public system under certainty and uncertainty.
  • Valuing health: the revealed preference approach
    Wage-risk studies; the insurance approach; hedonic property value studies; implied values from observed trade-offs between time and safety.
  • Valuing health: the expressed preference approach
    Contingent valuation studies; open-ended vs binary questions; potential biases; empirical applications to health.
  • The estimation of costs
    Programme costs - the costs of the intervention; market failures and the use of market prices; morbidity and mortality costs.
  • Discounting
    Economic rationale of discounting; opportunity cost of capital vs time preference; criticisms of discounting.
  • Cost-effectiveness analysis
    Measuring health outputs in non-monetary terms; intermediate vs final health outputs; decision rules with independent and mutually exclusive programmes; incremental analysis - defining the comparator; applied studies in the health sector.
  • Cost-utility analysis
    Cost-effectiveness vs cost-utility analysis; quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs); eliciting utility weights for health states; QALYs, individual preferences and attitudes to risk; QALYs, health-year equivalents (HYEs) and disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs); applied studies in the health sector.
  • Equity issues
    Efficiency and equity; welfare criteria and equity; the role of equity in economic evaluation.
  • Economic evaluation and policy-making
    Clinical practice guidelines; decision-making within health care organisations; new medical technologies; reimbursement decisions.
Course Classification(s) AdvancedAdvanced courses are designed for students having reached 'first degree' level of assumed knowledge, which provide a deep understanding of contemporary issues; or 'second degree' and higher levels of knowledge; or for transition to research training programs.
Areas of Interest Economics
Eligibility An honours degree in Economics with H2A or higher, or completion of a Graduate Diploma in Economics with an exit grade of Merit or better
Prescribed Texts

See Course Website: http://ecocomm.anu.edu.au/courses/course.asp?code=ECON8075

Preliminary Reading

See Course Website: http://ecocomm.anu.edu.au/courses/course.asp?code=ECON8075

Indicative Reading List See Course Website: http://ecocomm.anu.edu.au/courses/course.asp?code=ECON8075
Programs Master of Health Economics
Other Information

For further information please refer to http://ecocomm.anu.edu.au/courses/course.asp?code=ECON8075

Academic Contact See: http://ecocomm.anu.edu.au/courses/course.asp?code=ECON8075

The information published on the Study at ANU 2010 website applies to the 2010 academic year only. All information provided on this website replaces the information contained in the Study at ANU 2009 website.

Updated:   13 Nov 2015 / Responsible Officer:   The Registrar / Page Contact:   Student Business Solutions