Assessing cost-effectiveness in healthcare: history of the $50,000 per QALY threshold

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Cost-effectiveness analyses, particularly in the USA, commonly use a figure of $50,000 per life-year or quality-adjusted life-year gained as a threshold for assessing the cost-effectiveness of an intervention. The history of this practice is ill defined, although it has been linked to the end-stage renal disease kidney dialysis cost-effectiveness literature from the 1980s. The use of $50,000 as a benchmark for assessing the cost-effectiveness of an intervention first emerged in 1992 and became widely used after 1996. The appeal of the $50,000 figure appears to lie in the convenience of a round number rather than in the value of renal dialysis. Rather than arbitrary thresholds, estimates of willingness to pay…

Citation impact

649
total citations
FWCI
61.16
Percentile
100%
References
182
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Cost effectiveness
  • Willingness to pay
  • Quality-adjusted life year
  • Dialysis
  • Medicine
  • Actuarial science
  • Intervention (counseling)
  • Benchmark (surveying)
No related works found for this paper.