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Clinical Economics Sections
Author Bio
Introduction
Model of Economic Analysis
Basic Principles of Costing
Perspectives
Types of Analysis

Marginal and Incremental Analysis

Economic Efficiency
Sensitivity Analysis

Currently selected section: Discounting

Conclusion
Case Study 1
Case Study 2
Acknowledgements



Chapter 12: Clinical Economics: Discounting
         Immediate and Future Costs and Benefits

The time profiles of costs and benefits between alternative health care strategies are sometimes similar, but often different. For example, time profiles are similar when two medications for the same indication are compared.

Time profiles are different in a comparison of surgery vs. long-term treatment with medication. In this situation, surgical costs are incurred in the present, whereas medication costs stretch well into the future.

In general, individuals and society have a positive value of time preference--they prefer to defer costs to the future and to acquire benefits sooner rather than later. For example, $100 five years from now is valued less than $100 today because of the opportunity cost associated with deferred consumption (i.e. the value of what is foregone by not having the $100 over the next five years).

Discounting is a technique used to reflect the present value of a cost or health benefit that will occur at some future date. It is not an adjustment for inflation. Future costs are discounted to account for the time value of money, and future health benefits are discounted to account for the delay in satisfaction from these outcomes. The effect of discounting is to give future costs and health benefits less weight in an economic analysis.

 



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