More than 40 leading groups representing patients, people with disabilities, older adults, and communities of color joined the Partnership to Improve Patient Care (PIPC) in comment letters to the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) and the Innovation and Value Initiative (IVI) regarding the methodological flaws of the health technology assessment (HTA) and its implications for health equity.
|
Since its inception over a decade ago, PIPC has focused on infusing patient-centricity in our health care system. We have been highly focused on patient-centered solutions for evidence-based decision-making, including advocating for the development of high-quality patient reported outcomes data and development of high quality patient-centered comparative clinical effective research, as well as opposing reliance on one-size fits all cost-effectiveness thresholds. Our goal is for high-quality patient-centered data to equip and empower patients and people with disabilities to make decisions, with their providers, about the care and treatment best to address their individual needs.
In a letter to the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER), the Partnership to Improve Patient Care (PIPC) submitted feedback on ICER's assessment of treatments for vasomotor symptoms associated with menopause
The Partnership to Improve Patient Care (PIPC), Global Liver Institute, National Minority Quality Forum, and the Preparedness & Treatment Equity Coalition have published a new report (executive summary) to assist organizations, health systems, payers, and policymakers that want to center their value assessment work on health equity.
On November 1, 2022, letters (option 1; option 2) with 36 signatures were provided to the Oregon Health Evidence Review Commission (HERC) related to its proposed guide for use of quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) in HERC’s meeting materials, processes and decisions, particularly related to the prioritized list of services for coverage under Medicaid.
Advocates in Oregon joined a letter to the Health Evidence Review Commission (HERC) related to their review of proposed policy options to guide the Commission's use of quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) in meeting materials and decision-making.
PIPC Joins Over 80 Organizations Urging HHS Civil Rights Office to Ban QALYs Across Federal Programs10/3/2022
PIPC joined over 80 organizations in signing a letter to the HHS Office for Civil Rights commenting on the proposed rule implementing Section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act. The groups support a comprehensive proposed rule seeking to strengthen civil rights protections in federally funded health programs and HHS programs and agreed that the ability to access needed health care fully and free from discrimination is critical and requires action to support and strengthen existing nondiscrimination laws.
|
Topics
All
Archives
May 2024
|