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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2022
With ever increasing burden of disease and limited resources, health technology assessment (HTA) is required for efficient resources allocation and priority setting in healthcare. The objective of this study was to establish the baseline HTA evidence generation and use in Zimbabwe.
In 2019, we convened a stakeholder workshop on HTA at the University of Zimbabwe. Presentations on HTA processes, current healthcare reimbursement model, priority setting in the Ministry of Health and selection of medicines into the treatment guidelines, were done by the experts. We adapted the Health Intervention and Technology Assessment Program questionnaire for situational analysis of HTA introduction at national level and administered it among the workshop participants. We report the baseline information on HTA situation, the need, demand and supply of HTA in Zimbabwe obtained from the presentations and responses from workshop participants.
A total of 33 participants attended the workshop. Participants indicated that there is no formal HTA agency or process in Zimbabwe. The selection of medicines into treatment guideline is determined by disease burden, safety, efficacy and cost data, and it is done by a group of experts. The Association of Healthcare Funders of Zimbabwe (AFHOZ) reported that private healthcare funders use resource-based relative value scale system to determine tariffs and reimbursement levels. The regulator requires safety, efficacy and product quality data for the registration of medicines. Transparency in decision-making, registration of heath technology and formulation of essential medicines and treatment guidelines were reported as the major needs of HTA. The major users of HTA outputs were reported as medicines regulator, AFHOZ and Ministry of Health. Key suppliers of HTA evidence are academic and clinical research institutions and healthcare workers. Lack of training in health economics was cited as the major challenge to supply of HTA evidence.
There is a need to institute a formal, systematic and transparent processes of determining value of health technologies.