HERN webinar on ‘Application of constrained optimization to Health Benefits Package (HBP) design’
We had an amazing discussion session on the webinar titled ‘Application of constrained optimization to Health Benefits Package (HBP) design’ jointly arranged by The Health Economics Research Network (HERN), ARK Foundation, Centre for Health Economics (CHE), University of York, UK and DiaDeM on April 13, 2023.
The session was conducted by Sakshi Mohan, a Research Fellow at the Centre for Health Economics (CHE), University of York. Her research has been focused on developing and applying economic evaluation methods to inform public health resource allocation, including health benefits package design, geographical resource allocation, and public health value assessment of technologies in development, with a particular focus on low-income countries. Some of her recent work involves evaluating the effect of health system bottlenecks such as medical consumable stockouts and the use of health systems models for the evaluation of system-level interventions. She is a member of the Thanzi research programme, working with collaborators across the UK and Sub-Saharan Africa.
In the webinar, she discussed how the linear constrained optimization approach can be used to design a health benefits package (HBP) which maximizes population health given the health system constraints faced by a country. Using case studies of the application of this approach to Uganda and Malawi, she demonstrated the implications of not accounting for physical input constraints (in particular, health worker capacity) in HBP design and how the constrained optimization approach can help assess the marginal value of relaxing health system constraints.
SM Abdullah, Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Dhaka and a Research Fellow at ARK Foundation chaired the webinar. We had participants covering researchers, students and academics from Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and Ghana.
The Health Economics Research Network (HERN) intends to create a platform that will stimulate high-quality research in the area of health economics. HERN aims to host more webinars and interactive sessions on various topics regarding problems related to health economics as capacity expansion is the priority.
To know about upcoming webinars, please visit Health Economics Research Network (HERN) Facebook page and website – https://www.facebook.com/bdhern
Newsletter written by –
Fariha Islam Munia,
Secretariat, Health Economics Research Network (HERN)