About this Research Topic
There are numerous ways that health economics research can contribute to improving the management of age-related diseases. Cost-of-illness studies are helpful to show the size of the problem in terms of healthcare spending. Quality of life studies evaluate the impact of disease to the patients. Moreover, they can be used to evaluate the disease burden through quality-adjusted life years. Health economic evaluation such as cost-benefit analysis, cost-effectiveness analysis and cost-utility analysis informs healthcare policy makers which interventions represent the best value for money. While economic evaluation mainly improves efficiency in health resource allocation, recent research also promotes equity considerations in economic evaluation using methods such as extended cost-effectiveness analysis. This Research Topic aims to collect studies using different health economics methodologies in the field of age-related diseases.
We welcome contributions on a range of health economics studies on but not limited to:
· Health economic evaluation of interventions for age-related diseases;
· Cost and economic burden of age-related diseases
· Measuring quality of life in patients with age-related diseases;
· Correlation between socioeconomic status and age-related diseases;
· Inequalities in age-related diseases;
· This Research Topic is open to article types including Original Research, Systematic Review, Perspective, Editorial and Study Protocol.
Abstract submission is optional.
Keywords: Age-related diseases, Quality of Life, Economic Evaluation, Equity
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.