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The increasing importance of information on cost effectiveness has
been recognised by the National Institute for Clinical Excellence
(NICE)1 and will be an integral part of new national guidelines for the NHS. Analyses of the literature on economic evaluations also reveal a rapid increase in the number of published studies.2 Having access to reliable information on the
cost effectiveness of competing health technologies is therefore
important to decision makers and researchers in the NHS.
The NHS Economic Evaluation Database (NHS EED) project is commissioned
by the NHS Research and Development Programme to identify as many
studies on economic evaluations in the literature as possible and to
disseminate the principal findings to clinicians and other decision
makers by means of structured and critical abstracts. The abstracts are
freely accessible through a public database on the internet and also
from the Cochrane Library. The aim of the project is to
assist researchers and decision makers in identifying and interpreting
economic evaluations, which are spread over many databases and paper
based resources. The NHS EED website (available through
www.york.ac.uk/inst/crd) provides details of how to search the
database, how to use the inquiry desk of the NHS Centre for Reviews and
Dissemination (the parent organisation of NHS EED), how to contact NHS
EED staff, and other useful information. The database currently holds
1800 structured abstracts of full economic evaluations (cost
effectiveness, cost utility, and cost benefit studies) and
bibliographic details of 1953 cost studies, 649 reviews (of cost
effectiveness), and 459 studies of methodology.
NHS EED records show that hits on the database have increased over the
past year from an average of 4000 a month in the first six months of
1999 to an average of more than 5000 a month in the last six months of
1999. Initial findings of focus group work in two NHS health
authorities (North Yorkshire and Leicestershire) indicate that NHS EED
abstracts are useful and can help in the process of identifying and
interpreting economic evaluations. These findings indicate that NHS EED
is a valuable tool to decision makers and is being used at a high and
increasing rate.
Abstracts are completed according to guidelines developed by leading
health economists at the University of York in consultation with an
international advisory group. To allow readers to evaluate the
potential usefulness of NHS EED abstracts, we include an example, based
on a study by Morrell,3 in an appendix on the
BMJ website (bmj.com).
jn105{at}york.ac.uk
Boyka Stoykova
Jimmy Christie
Julie Glanville
Jos Kleijnen NHS Centre
for Reviews and Dissemination, University of York, York YO10 5DD
Mike Drummond Centre for Health
Economics, University of York, York YO10 5DD
Footnotes
NHS Economic Evaluation Database (NHS EED) www.york.ac.uk/inst/crd BMJ 2000;321;32
References
| 1. | NHS Executive. Faster access to modern treatment: how NICE appraisal will work. London: NHS Executive, 1999. |
| 2. | Backhouse ME, Backhouse RJ, Edey SA. Economic evaluation bibliography. Health Econ 1992; 1(suppl): 1-236. |
| 3. |
Morrell C, Walters S, Dixon S, Collins K, Brereton L, Peters J, et al.
Cost effectiveness of community leg ulcer clinics: randomised controlled trial.
BMJ
1998;
316:
1487-1491 |