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      <dc:type>Prosiding</dc:type>
      <dc:callnumber>P 362.1 WOR w</dc:callnumber>
      <dc:title>Workshop on evidence for health policy: burden of disease, Cost-Effectiveness, and health systems                             (Daftar isi:  1.Expanding the WHO tuberculosis control strategy: rethinking the role active case-finding, C.J.L. Murray;   2. Modeling the impact of global tuberculosis control strategies, ChristopherJ.L. Murray;   3. The decision rules of cost-effectiveness analysis, Goran Karlsson;   4. On the decision relus of cost-effectiveness analysis, Magnus Johannesson;   5. Cost-effectiveness and capital costs, Goran k;   6. How attractive does a new technology have to be to warrant adoption and  utilization? tentative guidelines for using clinical and economic evaluations, Andreas Laupacis;   7. Methods for the economic evaluation of health care programmes, Michael F. Drummond;   8. Cost-effectiveness and cost-benefit analysis of health services: the methodology and its application, A. Griffiths;   9. Valuing health care: costs, benefits, and effectiveness of pharmaceuticals and other medical technologies, Frank A. Sloan;   10. Cost-benefit analysis (CBA);   11. Use of contingent valuation to place a monetary value on pharmacy services: an overview and review of the literature, Karen B;   12. The use of conjoint analysis to elicit willingness-to-pay values: proceed with caution?, Julie Ratcliffe;   13. Is there a role for benefit-cost analysis in environmental, health, and safety regulation ?, Kenneth J. Arrow;   14. Reasons and persons, Derek Parfit;   15. Qalys and ethics: a health economist's perspective, Alan Williams;   16. Double jeopardy and the use of QALYs in health care allocation, Peter Singer;   17. Double jeopardy, the equal value of lives and the veil of ignorance: a rejoinder to harris, John McKie;   18. The value of DALY life: problems with ethics and validity of disability adjusted life years, Erik Nord;   19. Public preferences for the allocation of donor liver grafts for transplantation, Julie Ratclife;   20. Distributing scarce livers: the moral reasoning of the general public, Peter A. Ubel;   21. Recognizing bedside rationing: clear cases and tough calls, Peter A. Ubel;   22. Estimating confidence intervals for cost-effectiveness ratios: an example from a randomized trial, Mohammad A. Chaudhary;   23. Reflecting uncertainty in cost-effectiveness analysis, W.G. Manning;   24. Hanling uncertanty in economic evaluation, Andrew Briggs;   25. Probabilistic sensitivity analysis in cost-effectiveness: an application from a study of vaccination against pneumococcal bacteremia in the elderly, William Whang;   26. Estimating uncertainty ranges for cost by the bootstrap procedure combined with probabilistic sensitivity analysis, Joanne Lord;   27. Uncertaintyin the economic evaluation of health care technologies: the role of sensitivity analysis, Andrew Briggs;   28. Building uncertainty into cost-effectiveness rankings portofolio risk-return tradeoffs and implications for decision rules, Bernie J. O'Brien;   29. Cost-effectiveness of chemotherapy for sputum smear-positive pulmonary tuberculosis in Malawi, Mozambique and Tanzania, Eric De Jonghe;   30. Linking measures of health gain to explicit priority setting by an area health service in Australia, David A Cromwell;   31. Using discrete choice modelling in priority setting: an application to clinical service developments, Shelley Farrar;   32. Cost-effectiveness analysis and policy choices: investing in health systems, C.J.L. Murray;   33. A cost-effectiveness model for allocating health sector resources, Christopher Murray;   34. Disease control priorities in developing countries: an overview, Dean T. Jamison;   35. Oregon's medicaid ranking and cost-effectiveness: is there any relationship ?, Tammy O. Tengs;   36. Five-hundred life-saving interventions and their cost-effectiveness, Tammy O. Tengs;   37. Prioritising health services in an era of limits: the Oregon experience, John A Kitzhaber;   38. Priority setting: lessons from Oregon, Jennifer Dixon;   39. Oregon's methods: did cost-effectiveness analysis fail?;   40. </dc:title>
      
         <dc:author>WHO</dc:author>
      
      

      

      
         <dc:subjects>
            
               <dc:subject>Health Policy-Workshop</dc:subject>
            
               <dc:subject>Health Expendditure-Proceedings</dc:subject>
            
               <dc:subject>Cost Benefit Analysis-Proceedings</dc:subject>
            
               <dc:subject>Cost Effectiveness-Proceedings    (Lanjutan daftar isi:  40. Possible objectives and resulting entitlements of essential health care packages, Neil Soderlund</dc:subject>
            
               <dc:subject>  41. Methodology of the Harvard life-saving study)</dc:subject>
            
         </dc:subjects>
      
      

      <dc:publisher>Geneva: WHO, 2000</dc:publisher>
      <dc:year></dc:year>
      <dc:identifier>https://lib.fkm.ui.ac.id:443/detail?id=45184</dc:identifier>
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