“Consideration of Trade-offs Regarding COVID-19 Containment Measures in the United States: Implications for Canada,” by Mayvis Rebeira and Eric Nauenberg: A commentary

Rebeira and Nauenberg’s paper presents an exploratory analysis of a challenging question which I paraphrase as: “Were the extraordinarily costly social responses to the COVID-19 pandemic economically justified?” They wade bravely into the always controversial topic of assessing whether what governme...

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Published in:Health Reform Observer - Observatoire des Réformes de Santé
Main Author: Peter Berman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: McMaster University Library Press 2023-11-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://mulpress.mcmaster.ca/hro-ors/article/view/5622/4570
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container_title Health Reform Observer - Observatoire des Réformes de Santé
description Rebeira and Nauenberg’s paper presents an exploratory analysis of a challenging question which I paraphrase as: “Were the extraordinarily costly social responses to the COVID-19 pandemic economically justified?” They wade bravely into the always controversial topic of assessing whether what governments spend to achieve health gain – or in this case prevent its loss – are worth it, in economic terms. They apply well-known methods of modelling incremental cost-effectiveness analysis for value of life years gained, balancing that with comparisons to value of statistical life years measures used in different sectors. They encounter and detail many uncertainties in assembling the evidence on the effects and costs of social restrictions to prevent COVID-19 infection and spread, and the economic support programs used to buffer the negative effects of the pandemic. Their conclusion, perhaps not surprisingly, is for the United States – maybe – and for Canada, with more apparent success in epidemic control, perhaps a bit better. Perhaps the greater value of their paper is not its conclusions, but rather its posing of the questions. Here are some things it led me to ponder:
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spelling doaj-art-7deb8052fae948feac8aaa349ffd48072025-08-19T22:54:07ZengMcMaster University Library PressHealth Reform Observer - Observatoire des Réformes de Santé2291-63692023-11-01111Rebeira and Nauenberg’s paper presents an exploratory analysis of a challenging question which I paraphrase as: “Were the extraordinarily costly social responses to the COVID-19 pandemic economically justified?” They wade bravely into the always controversial topic of assessing whether what governments spend to achieve health gain – or in this case prevent its loss – are worth it, in economic terms. They apply well-known methods of modelling incremental cost-effectiveness analysis for value of life years gained, balancing that with comparisons to value of statistical life years measures used in different sectors. They encounter and detail many uncertainties in assembling the evidence on the effects and costs of social restrictions to prevent COVID-19 infection and spread, and the economic support programs used to buffer the negative effects of the pandemic. Their conclusion, perhaps not surprisingly, is for the United States – maybe – and for Canada, with more apparent success in epidemic control, perhaps a bit better. Perhaps the greater value of their paper is not its conclusions, but rather its posing of the questions. Here are some things it led me to ponder:https://doi.org/10.13162/hro-ors.v11i1.5622“Consideration of Trade-offs Regarding COVID-19 Containment Measures in the United States: Implications for Canada,” by Mayvis Rebeira and Eric Nauenberg: A commentaryPeter Berman0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3665-4527University of British ColumbiaRebeira and Nauenberg’s paper presents an exploratory analysis of a challenging question which I paraphrase as: “Were the extraordinarily costly social responses to the COVID-19 pandemic economically justified?” They wade bravely into the always controversial topic of assessing whether what governments spend to achieve health gain – or in this case prevent its loss – are worth it, in economic terms. They apply well-known methods of modelling incremental cost-effectiveness analysis for value of life years gained, balancing that with comparisons to value of statistical life years measures used in different sectors. They encounter and detail many uncertainties in assembling the evidence on the effects and costs of social restrictions to prevent COVID-19 infection and spread, and the economic support programs used to buffer the negative effects of the pandemic. Their conclusion, perhaps not surprisingly, is for the United States – maybe – and for Canada, with more apparent success in epidemic control, perhaps a bit better. Perhaps the greater value of their paper is not its conclusions, but rather its posing of the questions. Here are some things it led me to ponder:https://mulpress.mcmaster.ca/hro-ors/article/view/5622/4570covid-19containment strategieslockdownvalue-for-moneyeconomic evaluation
spellingShingle Peter Berman
“Consideration of Trade-offs Regarding COVID-19 Containment Measures in the United States: Implications for Canada,” by Mayvis Rebeira and Eric Nauenberg: A commentary
covid-19
containment strategies
lockdown
value-for-money
economic evaluation
title “Consideration of Trade-offs Regarding COVID-19 Containment Measures in the United States: Implications for Canada,” by Mayvis Rebeira and Eric Nauenberg: A commentary
title_full “Consideration of Trade-offs Regarding COVID-19 Containment Measures in the United States: Implications for Canada,” by Mayvis Rebeira and Eric Nauenberg: A commentary
title_fullStr “Consideration of Trade-offs Regarding COVID-19 Containment Measures in the United States: Implications for Canada,” by Mayvis Rebeira and Eric Nauenberg: A commentary
title_full_unstemmed “Consideration of Trade-offs Regarding COVID-19 Containment Measures in the United States: Implications for Canada,” by Mayvis Rebeira and Eric Nauenberg: A commentary
title_short “Consideration of Trade-offs Regarding COVID-19 Containment Measures in the United States: Implications for Canada,” by Mayvis Rebeira and Eric Nauenberg: A commentary
title_sort consideration of trade offs regarding covid 19 containment measures in the united states implications for canada by mayvis rebeira and eric nauenberg a commentary
topic covid-19
containment strategies
lockdown
value-for-money
economic evaluation
url https://mulpress.mcmaster.ca/hro-ors/article/view/5622/4570
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