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OP55 Did It Matter? Developing A Common Framework For Characterizing Impact Of Patient Involvement In Health Technology Assessment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 December 2023

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Abstract

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Introduction

While the impact of health technology assessments (HTAs) is often not evaluated, some HTA bodies measure the impact of patient involvement in their processes. Evaluating how patient involvement is perceived by all stakeholders may help to improve practices and avoid activities that unduly burden patient and HTA communities. Frameworks and tools have been designed to analyze the impact of patient engagement along the healthcare development lifecycle. Reporting on the impact of patient involvement in HTA-specific activities, however, continues to be infrequent, unstandardized, and not comprehensive.

Having a common framework to characterize and report on the impact of patient involvement may enable this practice to be optimized and harmonized across HTA contexts.

Methods

The Patient and Citizen Involvement Interest Group (PCIG) within Health Technology Assessment International set out to contextualize this impact and support reporting. A questionnaire was developed, piloted, and rolled out to collect multistakeholder personal perceptions of the impact of patient involvement in individual HTAs. Questions included: “What difference did you feel patient involvement made in the HTA activity?” and “What would have been missed without patient involvement?”. From January 2019 to September 2021, 24 responses (including one joint submission) were collected through the PCIG’s network from HTA bodies (11), patient representatives (12), and industry representatives (2) from North America (5), South America (3), Europe (13), and Australia (3).

Results

Common themes were extracted from these experiences to characterize the impact of patient participation in HTA processes. Based on these commonalities, a harmonized framework consisting of three “domains” is proposed: impact on the decision-making process; impact on patient stakeholders; and impact on the HTA body. The framework includes a set of items under each domain to support reporting.

Conclusions

By having common language and measures, the HTA community can harmonize processes across jurisdictions to evaluate and communicate the value of patient involvement in HTA. Improving consistent reporting may facilitate more efficient process improvement for meaningful integration of patient stakeholders into HTA decision-making.

Type
Oral Presentations
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press