Objective: The U.K. NHS Economic Evaluation Database (EED) project is commissioned to
identify papers on economic evaluations of health technologies and to disseminate their findings
to NHS decision makers by means of structured abstracts that are available through a public database
and the Cochrane Library. This paper discusses current issues relating to the economic
aspects of producing NHS EED abstracts.
Methods: A review of NHS EED was undertaken between 1994 and 1999 to determine
the methodologies adopted and issues that influence the usefulness of economic
evaluations. Methods adopted to improve the quality of NHS EED abstracts are also
reported.
Results: Eighty-five percent of NHS EED abstracts are cost-effectiveness analyses (CEAs),
9.3% are cost-utility analyses (CUAs), and only 1.4% are cost-benefit analyses (CBAs). Of the
total abstracts, 65.9% are based on single studies, 19.5% on reviews, 3.9% on estimates
of effectiveness, and 10.7% on combinations of these sources. Models are utilized in
16.7% of CEAs, 60.2% of CUAs, and 20% of CBAs. Analyses of CBA studies reveal a
degree of misuse of well-established definitions. NHS EED internal control
mechanisms are reported that provide a means of ensuring that abstracts are based on
sound academic principles.
Conclusions: Most economic evaluations are conducted by means of CEA, followed
by CUA, while CBA accounts for an extreme minority of cases. Single studies form the
principal source of effectiveness data, although models are widely used, principally in
CUA. The structure of NHS EED abstracts provides decision makers with the principal
results and an interpretation of the relative strengths and weaknesses of economic
evaluations.