Health Economics

Economic research in spinal cord injury (SCI) informs decisions in care and supports Canadian network initiatives.

Contributing to Future Healthcare Decisions

There are several important pieces to the Canadian healthcare puzzle. Economic analysis is an accepted and effective method for generating information to inform decisions. Economic research methodologies and techniques can serve to illustrate the burden of SCI, on the value of interventions on the direct and indirect cost of secondary health conditions for example, and establish evidence.

The Vision of a Health Economics Agenda

Praxis is supporting the development and implementation of a health economics agenda for spinal cord injury research in Canada. The agenda recognizes Praxis’ core programs, concurrent Canadian SCI Network member-led initiatives, and the gap in empirical health economic evidence in the field of SCI. Its intent is to lead collaboration between individuals and organizations with relevant experience, expertise and influence in order to establish evidence of the burden of SCI and the costs and consequences of initiatives aimed at mitigating the burden.

The health economics agenda for SCI research in Canada directs economic research in SCI to:

  • Increase the breadth, quality, and applicability of health economic analyses in the field of SCI;
  • Inform and encourage decisions concerning the care of individuals with SCI in Canada; and
  • Support Canadian SCI Network initiatives, including initiatives to demonstrate the value and expand the implementation of evidence-informed practices and support health technology and service innovation to prevent excess healthcare costs and protect and promote the well-being of individuals with SCI, their families, and supporters.

Health Economics Reports + Publications

Praxis publishes reports on health economics aims and results. We also collaborate on publications which contribute to establishing evidence in this area.

Requests for Services

View the health economics standing calls for services and their supporting scope of work documents.

 

Health Economics Reports + Publications

Health Economics Agenda

The “Health Economics: Agenda for SCI Research in Canada” report presents a detailed agenda for establishing evidence of the burden of spinal cord injury (SCI). It also explores the costs and consequences of initiatives aimed at mitigating the burden.

Results

Health Economics: 2021 Results Report

This five-year Results Report (2016-2021) on the Health Economics Agenda includes a summary of the work Praxis has done in collaboration since the agenda was published.

Publications

A list of the publications in the report with links to where they can be found online.

2020

White, Barry A. B., Rivers, Carly S., Chisholm, Jo-Anne, Willms, Rhonda, Papp, Anthony, Sproule, Shannon and McMurtry, Heather. Community Acquired Pressure Injuries in a Work-Related Spinal Cord Injury Population: Problem Characterization and Assessment of a Working Solution.  Journal of Tissue Viability. Available online 27 July 2020.

Whitehurst DGT et alEmpirical validity of a generic, preference-based capability wellbeing instrument (ICECAP-A) in the context of spinal cord injury – in 2020 accepted for publication in The Patient – Patient-Centered Outcomes Research.

2018

Iorio-Morin, C, Noonan, V. K., White, A.B., Noreau, L., Leblond, J., Dumont, F. S., Kwon, B. K., Dvorak, M., Dea, N. Quality of Life and Health Utility Scores Among Canadians Living With Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury – A National Cross-Sectional Study. Spine: July 15, 2018 – Volume 43 – Issue 14 – p 999-1006.

Engel L, Bryan S, Noonan VK, Whitehurst DGT. Using path analysis to investigate the relationships between standardized instruments that measure health-related quality of life, capability wellbeing and subjective wellbeing: An application in the context of spinal cord injury. Soc Sci Med. 2018 Sep;213:154-164. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.07.041. Epub 2018 Jul 29. PubMed PMID: 30081357.

2017

White, Barry A.B., Dea, Nicolas, Street, John T., Cheng, Christiana L., Rivers, Carly S., Attabib, Najmedden, Kwon, Brian K., Fisher, Charles G., and Dvorak, Marcel F. The Economic Burden of Urinary Tract Infection and Pressure Ulceration in Acute Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury Admissions: Evidence for Comparative Economics and Decision. Analytics from a Matched Case-Control Study. Journal of Neurotrauma. Oct 2017.

2016

Squair, Jordan W., White, Barry A. B., Bravo, Grace I., Martin Ginis, Kathleen A., and Krassioukov, Andrei V. The Economic Burden of Autonomic Dysreflexia during Hospitalization for Individuals with Spinal Cord Injury. Journal of Neurotrauma X:1–6 (2016) DOI: 10.1089/neu.2015.4370

Whitehurst DGT, Mittmann N, Noonan VK, Dvorak MF, Bryan S. Health state descriptions, valuations and individuals’ capacity to walk: a comparative evaluation of preference-based instruments in the context of spinal cord injury. Qual Life Res. 2016 Oct;25(10):2481-2496. doi: 10.1007/s11136-016-1297-3. Epub 2016 Apr 20. PubMed PMID: 27098235.

Other/Related

Chan B, Benton B, McIntyre A, Mittmann N, Teasell RW, Wolfe DL. Economic evaluation of spinal cord injury. In Eng JJ, Teasell RW, Miller WC, Wolfe DL, Townson AF, Hsieh JTC, Connolly SJ, Noonan VK, Loh E, McIntyre A, editors. Spinal Cord Injury Rehabilitation Evidence. Version 7.0: p 1-34. 2019.

Rivers CS, Fallah N, Noonan VK, Whitehurst DG, Schwartz CE, Finkelstein JA, Craven BC, Ethans K, O’Connell C, Truchon BC, Ho C, Linassi AG, Short C, Tsai E, Drew B, Ahn H, Dvorak MF, Paquet J, Fehlings MG, Noreau L. Health Conditions: Effect on Function, Health-Related Quality of Life, and Life Satisfaction After Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury. A Prospective Observational Registry Cohort Study. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2018 Mar;99(3):443-451. doi: 10.1016/j.apmr.2017.06.012. Epub 2017 Jul 19. PubMed PMID: 28732686.

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