Health Policy

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Kittiphong Thiboonboon ; Kittiphong Thiboonboon ; Richard De Abreu Lourenco; Paula Cronin; Terence Khoo; Stephen Goodall

亮点

  • Economic evaluations of a tax on sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) may pose additional difficulties, similar to those identified in other public health areas.
  • Fourteen economic evaluations of SSB taxes were identified from a systematic review, across which methodological challenges were observed.
  • The estimation of SSB tax effects on obesity outcomes is uncertain due to reliance on indirect evidence from studies considered less robust than RCTs.
  • The evaluations predominantly focus on health outcomes, like quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), from a healthcare system cost perspective, with limited consideration given to broader non-health consequences.
  • Although there has been an increase in equity analyses, approaches vary significantly.

摘要

Introduction

Economic evaluations of public health interventions like sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) taxes face difficulties similar to those previously identified in other public health areas. This stems from challenges in accurately attributing effects, capturing outcomes and costs beyond health, and integrating equity effects. This review examines how these challenges were addressed in economic evaluations of SSB taxes.

Methods

A systematic review was conducted to identify economic evaluations of SSB taxes focused on addressing obesity in adults, published up to February 2021. The methodological challenges examined include measuring effects, valuing outcomes, assessing costs, and incorporating equity.

Results

Fourteen economic evaluations of SSB taxes were identified. Across these evaluations, estimating SSB tax effects was uncertain due to a reliance on indirect evidence that was less robust than evidence from randomised controlled trials. Health outcomes, like quality-adjusted life years, along with a healthcare system perspective for costs, dominated the evaluations of SSB taxes, with a limited focus on broader non-health consequences. Equity analyses were common but employed significantly different approaches and exhibited varying degrees of quality.

Conclusion

Addressing the methodological challenges remains an issue for economic evaluations of public health interventions like SSB taxes, suggesting the need for increased attention on those issues in future studies. Dedicated methodological guidelines, in particular addressing the measurement of effect and incorporation of equity impacts, are warranted.

Tax; Sugar-sweetened beverages; Sugary drinks; Economic evaluations; Equity; Public health intervention; Economics; Cost-effectiveness analysis

10.5

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