Elsevier

Value in Health

Volume 15, Issue 5, July–August 2012, Pages 650-655
Value in Health

Original research
Economic evaluation
Development of a Database of Instruments for Resource-Use Measurement: Purpose, Feasibility, and Design

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jval.2012.03.004Get rights and content
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Abstract

Background

Health economists frequently rely on methods based on patient recall to estimate resource utilization. Access to questionnaires and diaries, however, is often limited. This study examined the feasibility of establishing an open-access Database of Instruments for Resource-Use Measurement, identified relevant fields for data extraction, and outlined its design.

Methods

An electronic survey was sent to authors of full UK economic evaluations listed in the National Health Service Economic Evaluation Database (2008–2010), authors of monographs of Health Technology Assessments (1998–2010), and subscribers to the JISCMail health economics e-mailing list. The survey included questions on piloting, validation, recall period, and data capture method. Responses were analyzed and data extracted to generate relevant fields for the database.

Results

A total of 143 responses to the survey provided data on 54 resource-use instruments for inclusion in the database. All were reliant on patient or carer recall, and a majority (47) were questionnaires. Thirty-seven were designed for self-completion by the patient, carer, or guardian, and the remainder were designed for completion by researchers or health care professionals while interviewing patients. Methods of development were diverse, particularly in areas such as the planning of resource itemization (evident in 25 instruments), piloting (25), and validation (29).

Conclusion

On the basis of the present analysis, we developed a Web-enabled Database of Instruments for Resource-Use Measurement, accessible via www.DIRUM.org. This database may serve as a practical resource for health economists, as well as a means to facilitate further research in the area of resource-use data collection.

Keywords

clinical trials
cost analysis
data collection methods
economic evaluation
health technology assessment

Cited by (0)

DIRUM team: Professor Dyfrig Hughes and Dr. Colin Ridyard (Bangor University), Dr. William Hollingworth, Dr. Sian Noble, and Dr. Joanna Thorn (University of Bristol), Professor Joanna Coast (University of Birmingham), Dr. David Whitehurst (University of British Columbia), and Professor Martin Knapp (London School of Economics and Political Science). DIRUM is funded via the Network of Hubs for Trial Methodology Research (MRC).