4.2 Article

Considering equity in priority setting using transmission models: Recommendations and data needs

Journal

EPIDEMICS
Volume 41, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.epidem.2022.100648

Keywords

Transmission modelling; Health economics; Equity; Cost-effectiveness analysis; Priority; Setting

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This article discusses how to consider health equity in disease transmission models and provides guidance on technical approaches, including specifying equity concepts, choosing evaluation frameworks, model structures, and data requirements.
Objectives: Disease transmission models are used in impact assessment and economic evaluations of infectious disease prevention and treatment strategies, prominently so in the COVID-19 response. These models rarely consider dimensions of equity relating to the differential health burden between individuals and groups. We describe concepts and approaches which are useful when considering equity in the priority setting process, and outline the technical choices concerning model structure, outputs, and data requirements needed to use trans-mission models in analyses of health equity.Methods: We reviewed the literature on equity concepts and approaches to their application in economic eval-uation and undertook a technical consultation on how equity can be incorporated in priority setting for infectious disease control. The technical consultation brought together health economists with an interest in equity -informative economic evaluation, ethicists specialising in public health, mathematical modellers from various disease backgrounds, and representatives of global health funding and technical assistance organisations, to formulate key areas of consensus and recommendations.Results: We provide a series of recommendations for applying the Reference Case for Economic Evaluation in Global Health to infectious disease interventions, comprising guidance on 1) the specification of equity concepts; 2) choice of evaluation framework; 3) model structure; and 4) data needs. We present available conceptual and analytical choices, for example how correlation between different equity-and disease-relevant strata should be considered dependent on available data, and outline how assumptions and data limitations can be reported transparently by noting key factors for consideration.Conclusions: Current developments in economic evaluations in global health provide a wide range of method-ologies to incorporate equity into economic evaluations. Those employing infectious disease models need to use these frameworks more in priority setting to accurately represent health inequities. We provide guidance on the technical approaches to support this goal and ultimately, to achieve more equitable health policies.

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