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Ethical and policy aspects of
cost-effective analysis:
The case of screening and treatment
Costly technological innovations present ethical and policy challenges when
budgets are limited and there are many patients who could potentially benefit.
Should screening be used to identify candidates for treatment when they will then
have to wait for substantial periods of time, balancing individual anxiety,
depression, and stigma with potential changes in their risky transmission
behaviors? Should highly effective but high cost treatments be offered relative to
less effective but less expensive alternatives? If annual budgets are not sufficient
to offer treatment to all eligible candidates, what is the most efficient, safest, and
fairest way to prioritize patients for treatment and to actively monitor those that
are waiting? This talk explores these challenges in the currently relevant context of
hepatitis C virus (HCV) screening and treatment. The advent of highly effective new
treatment regimens for chronic HCV has prompted calls to widen screening
efforts to identify the estimated 100s of millions of infected individuals worldwide
and to provide treatment regimens that cost $10,000s. The talk highlights core
methods of the Society for Medical Decision Making which will be holding a
conference and short-courses in Hong Kong on January 8-10, 2016.
Date| 7 July 2015 (Tuesday)
Time|11:00 a.m. – 12:30p.m.
Venue| Seminar Room 1, 2/F Lui Che Woo Clinical Sciences Building
Prince of Wales Hospital
Online registration|
http://www.med.cuhk.edu.hk/registration/view.php?id=207479
Speaker | Prof. Jeremy Goldhaber-Fiebert
Assistant Professor of Medicine, Stanford School of Medicine
Jeremy Goldhaber-Fiebert, PhD, is an Assistant Professor of Medicine, a Core Faculty
Member at the Centers for Health Policy/Primary Care and Outcomes Research, and a
Faculty Affiliate of the Stanford Center on Longevity and Stanford Center for
International Development. His research focuses on complex policy decisions
surrounding the prevention and management of increasingly common, chronic
diseases and the life course impact of exposure to their risk factors. In the context of
both developing and developed countries including the US, India, China, and South
Africa, he has examined chronic conditions including type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular
diseases, human papillomavirus and cervical cancer, tuberculosis, and hepatitis C and
on risk factors including smoking, physical activity, obesity, malnutrition, and other
diseases themselves. Dr. Goldhaber-Fiebert graduated from Harvard in 1997. Winner of
the Lee B. Lusted Prize for Outstanding Student Research from the Society for Medical
Decision Making (SMDM) in 2006 and in 2008, he completed his PhD in Health Policy
concentrating in Decision Science at Harvard in 2008. He joined Stanford’s faculty in
2008 and was elected Trustee of SMDM in 2011.
Enquiries
CUHK Centre for Bioethics
[email protected]|(852) 3943 9876