• Health affairs · Apr 2013

    Evolving reimbursement and pricing policies for devices in Europe and the United States should encourage greater value.

    • Corinna Sorenson, Michael Drummond, and Lawton R Burns.
    • London School of Economics and Political Science, UK. c.sorenson@lse.ac.uk
    • Health Aff (Millwood). 2013 Apr 1; 32 (4): 788-96.

    AbstractRising health care costs are an international concern, particularly in the United States, where spending on health care outpaces that of other industrialized countries. Consequently, there is growing desire in the United States and Europe to take a more value-based approach to health care, particularly with respect to the adoption and use of new health technology. This article examines medical device reimbursement and pricing policies in the United States and Europe, with a particular focus on value. Compared to the United States, Europe more formally and consistently considers value to determine which technologies to cover and at what price, especially for complex, costly devices. Both the United States and Europe have introduced policies to provide temporary coverage and reimbursement for promising technologies while additional evidence of value is generated. But additional actions are needed in both the United States and Europe to ensure wise value-based reimbursement and pricing policies for all devices, including the generation of better pre- and postmarket evidence and the development of new methods to evaluate value and link evidence of value to reimbursement.

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