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Federal Sponsorship of Cost-Effectiveness and Related Research in Health Care: 1997–2001
Authors:Joanna E Siegel  ScD    Sepheen C Byron  MHS    William F Lawrence  MD  MS
Institution:Research Initiative in Clinical Economics, Center for Outcomes and Evidence, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD 20850, USA. jsiegel@AHRQ.edu
Abstract:OBJECTIVES: To describe recent federal sponsorship of cost-effectiveness and related health economics research to provide insight into the functioning of existing research support systems and assess the roles of federal health agencies. METHODS: Using the PubMed database, we identified cost-effectiveness and related publications citing support from a US government entity and published during the period of 1997 through 2001, and audited them for information on funding sources, study type, and content focus. RESULTS: Five Department of Health and Human Services agencies and centers and the Veterans Administration are cited as funders in 74% of 520 federally supported health economics publications we identified. Three-fourths of federally supported publications address five areas of high disease burden: infections, cancer, HIV/AIDS, cardiovascular disease, and substance abuse. Other high burden diseases, including mental health, diabetes, and injuries, receive less attention. Federal support of health economics studies of health education and care delivery-intervention types underexamined in the field-is relatively strong but most often focuses on substance abuse or mental health services. Each of the top federal funders has a distinct funding pattern, but there are substantial areas of overlap within which we could not identify content domains specific to one funder or another. CONCLUSIONS: Federal support of health economics research has paralleled growth in the field. Federal funders support projects consistent with their mission and focus on high-burden disease areas. However, overlapping funding areas, ambiguity concerning agency interests within overlapping content areas, and gaps in some disease and intervention areas suggest that the coordination of health economics research funding could be improved.
Keywords:cost-effectiveness  federal funding  federal health agencies  health economics  research priorities
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