Merits of the social return on investment methodology for assessing the value of palliative care programmes

Article

MONTON, Olivia | DRABO, Emmanuel F. | FULLER, Shannon | JOHNSTON, Fabian M.

Despite the widely accepted benefits of palliative care for individuals with serious illnesses and their families, the utilisation of this approach remains low. Although an increased use of palliative care services can increase the value of health-care spending by providing comprehensive wraparound services to support care, the economic evidence required to implement, promote, and engage in palliative care models on a wide scale eludes the affected individuals, health-care providers, payers, and policy makers. This gap in evidence is partly owing to the methodological limitations of standard value-assessment frameworks, which do not capture important societal dimensions of the value generated by palliative care. This Personal View proposes the adoption of value-assessment frameworks that incorporate broader dimensions of social value into the evaluation of palliative care programmes. We focus on the social return on investment methodology as an example of a value-assessment framework that can complement standard frameworks to better capture the social impact and all-around benefits of palliative care.

https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanhl/article/PIIS2666-7568(24)00195-8/fulltext

Voir la revue «The Lancet Healthy Longevity»

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