The field of health care technology assessment focuses on the use of medical technologies--their impacts on safety, efficacy, and effectiveness; cost-effectiveness and cost benefit; quality; and their social, legal, and ethical implications. This wide-ranging monograph addresses some of the gaps in understanding health status and quality of life, such as the use of quality-of-life measures in technology assessment, organ transplantation, and pharmaceutical trials. One chapter provides basic references for the technical attributes of many established measures and some lesser known ones. The final chapter offers recommendations concerning the appropriate applications of these measures and highlights areas for cooperative research.
Council on Health Care Technology, Institute of Medicine
1 Front Matter; 2 1. Conceptual Background and Issues in Quality of Life; 3 2. The Use of Quality-of-Life Measures in Technology Assessment; 4 3. Quality-of-Life Measures in Liver Transplantation; 5 4. Quality-of-Life Measures and Methods Used to Study Antihypertensive Medications; 6 5. The Use of Quality-of-Life Measures in the Private Sector; 7 6. Assessing Quality of Life: Measures and Utility; 8 7. Applications of Quality-of-Life Measures and Areas for Cooperative Research; 9 The Authors
National Research Council, Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education, Institute of Medicine, and Families Board on Children, Youth, Steve Olson
Institute of Medicine, Board on the Health of Select Populations, and Transgender Health Issues and Research Gaps and Opportunities Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual
Institute of Medicine, Board on Population Health and Public Health Practice, Division of Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, Division of International Health
Institute of Medicine, Committee to Develop Methods Useful to the Department of Veteran Affairs in Estimating Its Physician Requirements, Joseph Lipscomb