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Workshop on evidence for health policy: burden of disease, cost-effectiveness, and health systems: 1. Responsiveness measures: consumer assessment of health plans study (CAHPS TM); 2. The use of cognitive testing to develop and evaluate CAHPS TM 1.0 core survey items; 3. Psychometric properties of the CAHPS TM 1.0 survey measures; 4. WHO strategy on measuring responsiveness; 5. Measuring responsiveness: results of a key informants survey in 35 countries; 6. WHO survey on health and health system responsiveness: questionnaire sections - draft; 7. Health system responsiveness survey : draft questionnaire - responsiveness section only; 8. Surveying health system preferences: Measuring preferences on health system performance assessment; 9. Overall goal attainment: Human development index: methodology and mmeasurement; 10. Good and bad growth: the human development reports; 11. Overall performance concepts: The comparative efficiency of national health systems in producing health: an analysis of 191 countries; 12. Frontier production functions and technical efficiency measures; 13. The estimation of technical efficiency; 14. Production frontiers and panel data; 15. Overall performance measures: The efficiency of government expenditure: experiences from Africa; 16. Measuring health production performance in the OECD; 17. What do the human development indices reveal?; 18. Exercise on measuring preferences: Health financing: Uncertainty and the welfare economics of medical care; 19. Incentives and provider payment methods; 20. Health insurance schemes for people outside formal sector employment; 21. New Zealand's health reforms: a clash of culture; 22. Improving allocative efficiency of health interventions: searching for policy tools; 23. Public and private roles in health: theory and financing patterns; 24. Some interim results from a controlled trial of cost sharing in health insurance; 25. Primary care reform: a country comparison of 'budget holding'; 26. Provision: Design, content and financing of an essential national package of health services; 27. The history and pronciples of managed competition; 28. Limits to rationality: economics, economists and priority setting; 29. Sub-National application of health systems performance framework: Measuring overall health system performance for 191 countries; 30.
P 362.1 WOR w
[s.l.] : Geneva: WHO, 2000, s.a.]
Prosiding   Pusat Informasi Kesehatan Masyarakat
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Workshop on evidence for health policy: burden of disease, cost-effectiveness, and health systems. (Daftar isi: 1. Foundations of cost-effectiveness analysis for health and medical practices, Milton C. Weinsrein; StasonWilliam B.; 2. Cost-effectiveness analysis: an introductory guide for clinicians, Marcones, George A; 3. Developmentof WHO guidelines on generalized cost-effectiveness analysis, Murray, Christopher J.L; (et al); 4. Cost analysis in primary health care: a training manual for programme managers, Andrew Creese; 5. Public hospitals in developing countries: resource use, cost, financing, Howard Barnum; 6. Methods for the economic evaluation of health care programmes, Michael F. Drummond; 7. National price levels and the prices of tradables and nontradables, Irving B. Kravis; 8. For here or to go ? Purchasing power parity and the big mac, Michael R. Pakko; 9. Cost-analysis: issues and methodologies, Anandarup Ray; 10. THe Penn World Table (PWT) estimates of purchasing power parities and consumption, invesment, and governt price parities for non-benchmark countries (with special reference to PWT 5.6), Alan Heston; 11. The real and nominal? making inflationary adjusments to cost and other economic data, Lilani Kumaranayake; 12. Discounting human lives, Maureen L Cropper; 13. Methods for the economic evaluation of health care programmes, Michael F. Drummond; 14. Time preference, J. Lipscomp; 15. Time preference in medical making and cost-effectiveness analysis , Donald A Redelmier; 15. Discounting costs and effects: a reconsideration, Ben A. Van Hout; 16. Valuing health care: costs, benefits, and effectiveness of pharmaceuticals and other medical technologies, FRank A. Sloan; 17. Standardizing methodologies for economic evaluation in health care: practice, problems, and potential, Michael Drummond; 18. How much does excess inpatient capacity really cost ?, Parves R. Sopariwala; 19. Applying ABC to healthcare: as rising costs impact managed care, a successful manufacturing costing method is being applied to help managers make decisions on capitation contract bidding, cost containment, and organizational structure, Twothy D. West; 20.. IMCI multi-country evaluation form 5 A: health facility costs questionnaire; 21. The usefulness of rations for allocation decisions: the case of stroke, A. Ament; 22. A review of the use of health status measures in economic evaluation, J Brazier; 23. Preference-based measures in economic evaluation in health care, Peter J. Neumann; 24. Multi-aatribute preference functions: health utilities index, George W. Torrance; 25. Utilities and quality-adjusted life years, George W. Torrance; 26. Disability-adjusted life years: a critical review, Sudhir anand; 27. Understanding DALYs, Christopher J.L. Murray; 28. QALYs, HYEs and individualpreferences - a graphical illustration, Magnus Johannesson; 29. What randomized trials and systematic reviews can offer decision makers, Douglas G. Altman; 30. Evaluation of health interventions at area and organisation level, Obioha C Ukoumunne; 31. Interpreting the evidence: choosing between randomised and non-randomised studis, Martin McKee; 32. An evidence based approach to individualising treatment, Paul P. Glasziou; 33. Efficacy and effectiveness issues in the NIDA cooperative agreement: interventions for out-of-teatment drug-users; 34. The practice of antenatal care: comparing four study sites in different parts of the world participating in the WHO antenatal care rondomized controlled trial, Gilda Piaggio; 35. Behavioral issues in the efficacy versus effectiveness of pharmacologic agents in the prevention of cardiovascular disease, Thommas A. Pearson)
P 362.1 WOR w
[s.l.] : Geneva: WHO, 2000, s.a.]
Prosiding   Pusat Informasi Kesehatan Masyarakat
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Workshop on eviden for health policy: burden of disease, cost-effectiveness, and health systems. (Daftar isi: 1. Model of mortality and age composition; 2. Life tables for 191 countries: data methods and results, A.D. Lopez (et al); 3. WHO system of model life tables, C.J.L. Murray (et al); 4. Measuring mortality, fertility, and natural increase: a self teaching guide elementary measures, James A. Palmore; 5. MortPak-life: the United Nations software package for mortality measurement; 6. Measuring the health of the U.S. population, David M. Cutler; 7. Summarizing population health: directions for the development and application of population metrics; 8. A critical examination of summary measures of population health, Christopher J.L. Murray (et al); 9. Health status assessment methods for adults: past accomplishments and future challenges, Colleen A. McHorney; 10. Comparative analysis more than 50 household surveys on health status, Ritu Sadana (et al); 11. Health expectancy: an indicator for change ?, Jan J. Barendregt (et al); 12. Health expectancies: an overview and critical appraisal, Colin Mathers; 13. Estimates of dale for 191 countries: methods and results, Colin D. Mathers (et al); 14. Active life among the elderly in the United States: multistate life-table estimates and population projections, Richard G. Rogers; 15. Premature mortality in the United States: public health issues in the use of years of potential life lost; 16. Decline in tuberculosis: the death rate falls to tell entire story, Mary Dempsey; 17. Aging, natural death, and the compression of morbidity, James F. Fries; 18. A standardized rate for mortality defined in units of lost years of life, William Haenszel; 18. Measuring the burden of disease: healthy life-years, Adnan A. Hyder; 19. Applying burden of disease methods in developing countries: a case study from Pakistan, Adnan A Hyder; 20. Past and future life expectancy increases at later ages: thrie implications for the linkage of chronic morbidity, disability, and mortality, Kenneth G. Manton; 21. Premature death in the United States: years of life lost and health priorities, Janet D. Perloff (et al); 22. Use of direct and indirect techniques for estimating the completeness of death registration systems, Samuel H. Preston; 23. Approaches to the collection of mortality data in the context of data needs; 24. Age patterns of marriage, Ansley J. Coale; 25. Factors influincing discrepancies between premortem and postmortem diagnoses, Ron M. Battle (et al); 26. Diagnostic errors discovered at autopsy, Mona Britton; 27. Verbal autopsies for adult deaths: issues in their development and validation, Daniel C. (et al); 28. Elements for a theory of the health transition, Julio F. (et al); 29. Analytical potential for multiple cause-of-death data, Robert A. Israel; 30. Death certificate coding practices related to diabetes in European countries - the 'EURODIAB subarea C' study, Eric J. (et al); 31. The Epidemiologic transition: a theory of the epidemiology of population change, Abdel R. Omran; 32. Childhood deaths in Africa: use and limitations of verbal autopsies; 33. Maternal recall of symptoms associated with childhood deaths in rural East Africa, RW Snow, (et al); 34. An appraisal of the epidemic rise of coronary heart disease and its decline, W.E. stehbens; 35. Measurement of overall and causes-specific mortality in infants and children: memorandum from a WHO/UNICEF meeting)
P 362.1 WOR w
[s.l.] : Geneva: WHO, 2000, s.a.]
Prosiding   Pusat Informasi Kesehatan Masyarakat
:: Pengguna : Pusat Informasi Kesehatan Masyarakat
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