Ranking Reproductive Health Problems to Define Service Priorities

Theo Vos

Abstract

 The 1993 World Development Report proposed a new paradigm to priority setting in health services. Two important steps in this approach are burden of disease estimates and cost effectiveness analyses that use disability adjusted life years (DALY) as the measure of health outcome. This paper explores how this methodology can be applied to estimate the size of the burden of disease caused by conditions currently considered the domain of reproductive health. Examples from the Global Burden of Disease Study and the Mauritius Burden of Disease Study are used to illustrate the strengths and weakness of this approach. While most of the criticism has centered on the assumptions of discounting and age weighting in the application of this methodology to priority setting, it is of far greater importance to examinie the uncertainty of epidemiological and costing estimates. The conclusion is that however fraught with uncertainty, this approach to priority setting in health is an improvement over traditional influences on the decision-making process based on ranking of mortality alone, shaky assumptions of ‘preventable’ deaths or the most vocal and advocacy groups.

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References

Word Bank. World Development Report: Investing in Health. New York: Oxford University Press, 1993.

Murray CJL and Lopez AD. The global burden of disease in 1990: final results and their sensitivity to alternative epidemiological perspectives, discount rates, age weights and disability weight. In: Murray CJL and Lopez AD (Eds). The Global Burden of Disease: A Comprehensive Assessment of Mortality and Disability from Disease, Injuries and Risk Factors in 1990 and projected in 2020. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1996.

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