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Modeling for HTA

HTADS - Program on Health Technology Assessment &
Decision Sciences

Modeling Approaches for HTA: a Practical Hands-On Workshop  
3-Day Certified Course

Decision trees - Markov models - Microsimulation models
Discrete event simulation models - Infectious disease models ......

LOGO HTADS
27- 29 May 2010
UMIT - The Health & Life Sciences University
Hall i.T., Austria

Course Directors:
Prof. Dr. Uwe Siebert, MPH, MSc
Prof. Ron Goeree, MA

Course Coordinator:
Beate Jahn, PhD


Course Overview
Agenda
Faculty
Date of Course & Location
Registration
Payment Details
Accomodations & Directions
Contact 


BROCHURE
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Please download our course brochures:
Information on two pages 
Information on six pages 
 


COURSE OVERVIEW
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Who is the course aimed at?

The course is created for members of

  • Healthcare & health policy organizations, national HTA Agencies
  • Pharmaceutical & medical device industry
  • Academia and research institutions
  • Health insurances/sickness funds
  • Consultancy organizations

Course Pre-requisites?
Basic knowledge of spreadsheet programs (e.g. MS Excel) is recommended. Course language is English.

Course Documentation?
Certificates will be provided to all participants after the course.

 

AGENDA
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TOPICS
DAY 1
Modeling overview and taxonomy
Decision trees, state-transition and Markov models
Handling uncertainty and variability
DAY 2
Microsimulation models
Discrete event simulation models
Handling individual behavior and waiting lines
DAY 3
Infectious disease models
Handling dynamic transmissions and herd immunity
Other modeling approaches (e.g., agent-based models, system dynamics models, causal influence models, biologic systems models)

 

FACULTY
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Course Director, Lecturer Prof. Uwe Siebert
Uwe Siebert, MD, MPH, MSc, ScD
Professor of Public Health (UMIT), Adjunct Professor of Health Policy and Management (Harvard University)
Chair, Institute of Public Health, Medical Decision Making & Health Technology Assessment
UMIT - University for Health Sciences, Medical Informatics & Technology, Austria
 
  Prof. Ron Goeree
Course Director, Lecturer
Ron Goeree, MA
Director, PATH Research Institute
Associate Professor in the Department of Clinical Epidemiology
and Biostatistics, McMaster University, Canada
 
  Beate Jahn, PhD
Course Coordinator, Lecturer
Beate Jahn, PhD
Institute of Public Health, Medical Decision Making & Health Technology Assessment
UMIT - University for Health Sciences, Medical Informatics & Technology
 
  Mirjam Kretschmar, PhD
Lecturer
Mirjam Kretzschmar, PhD
Associate Professor Theoretical Epidemiology, Julius Centre for Health Sciences & Primary Care, University
Medical Centre Utrecht, Project leader Surveillance, Center for Infectious Disease Control, RIVM, The Netherlands
 
  Gord Blackhouse, BComm, MBA, MSc
Lecturer
Gord Blackhouse, BComm, MBA,MSc
Research Associate, PATH Research Institute, Canada
 

Course Assistant
Ursula Rochau, MD
Institute of Public Health, Medical Decision Making & Health Technology Assessment
UMIT - University for Health Sciences, Medical Informatics & Technology

 

Uwe Siebert, MD, MPH, MSc, ScD

Prof. Uwe Siebert, MD, MPH, MSc, ScD, Professor of Public Health, is the Chair of the Department of Public Health, Medical Decision Making and Health Technology Assessment at the University of Health Sciences, Medical Informatics and Technology (UMIT) in Austria. He is also Adjunct Professor of Health Policy and Management at the Harvard School of Public Health and Associate Professor of Radiology at Harvard Medical School, where he directs the Program on Cardiovascular Research at the Institute for Technology Assessment, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston. He has an adjunct teaching appointment at the School of Public Health and Epidemiology at the University of Munich.
After medical school, Prof. Siebert worked for several years as a physician in international public health projects. He then earned an MPH at the Munich School of Public Health, and completed an MSc in Epidemiology and an ScD in Health Policy and Management with a concentration in decision sciences at the Harvard School of Public Health. Before he started his faculty position at Harvard Medical School, he was the Director of the Bavarian Public Health Research and Coordinating Center at the University of Munich, Germany, and completed Visiting Scholarship at the Harvard Center for Risk Analysis.

His research interests include applying decision-analytic modeling, meta-analysis, quality-of-life assessment and cost-effectiveness analysis in the framework of health technology assessments (HTA) as well as in the clinical context of routine health care. His current substantive research focuses on cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, hepatitis C, HIV, and neurological disorders. His methodological research is focused on evaluations of public health interventions, prevention and screening, diagnostic imaging procedures, personalized medicine as well as the development of causal decision models based on complex longitudinal data with time-varying interventions or exposures.
Prof. Siebert is a member of the Board of Trustees of the Society of Medical Decision Making (SMDM), a member of the International Expert Committee Advising the Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG) on the Methods for Economic Evaluations of Health Care Interventions, a member of the Advisory Board of the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Health Technology Assessment in Austria, and he has served as a member of the Board of Directors of the International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research (ISPOR). He is member of the Steering Committee of ONCOTYROL - Center of Personalized Cancer Medicine in Austria and Director of the Division for Public Health Decision Modeling, HTA and Health Economics in the Center. He is the Chairman of the Working Groups "Health Economics" and "Medical Decision Making" of the German Society for Medical Informatics, Biometry and Epidemiology (GMDS). He is Co-Chair of the "Issues in Methodology Section" of the SMDM Policy Initiative. He teaches courses in decision analysis, HTA, economic evaluation, and advanced epidemiologic methods at several universities and for industry in Europe and the US. He advises government agencies, academic institutions and the industry regarding the conduction and impact of health technology assessments on policy and reimbursement decisions. He has authored more than 150 publications including HTA reports, textbook chapters for decision analysis, scientific articles, and editorials.

Ron Goeree, MA

Ron Goeree is an associate professor in the Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics (CE&B), at McMaster University and Director of the PATH Research Institute. He is a member of the Centre for the Evaluation of Medicines (CEM) and affiliated with St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton (SJHH).  His research interests are centered on health technology assessment, decision modelling and economic evaluations. Ron teaches in the Health Research Methodology (HRM) Program, where he recently developed a new course in advanced decision analytic modelling and developed a Field of Specialization for the HRM Program in health technology assessment.  Ron Goeree is involved in numerous research projects with both the Ontario MOHLTC and CADTH. He also has extensive experience as a consultant on research activities of government bodies, and with many other agencies and corporations.   Ron Goeree received his undergraduate and graduate degrees from McMaster University.

Beate Jahn, PhD

Beate Jahn, Dr.rer.soc.oec., Dipl.-Math. oec.,  is a Senior Scientist at the Department of Public Health, Medical Decision Making and Health Technology Assessment at UMIT - University of Health Sciences, Medical Informatics and Technology in Hall i.T., Austria. 
After her studies of Mathematics and Economics, Dr. Jahn worked in the Department of Structured Finance & Project Finance at the German Railway Company 'Deutsche Bahn'. She then moved to Austria where she worked as a research assistant at the Department of Medical Statistics, Computer Sciences and Health Management at Innsbruck Medical University. During this time she spent several months at PATH, the research institute for Assessment of Technology in Health, Hamilton, Canada. She completed her doctoral degree in Social Science with the focus on health-economic evaluation at the Leopold-Franzens-University of Innsbruck. She joined the Department of Public Health, Medical Decision Making and Health Technology Assessment at UMIT in June 2007.

Her research interests include applying decision-analytic modeling, mathematical methods, quality-of-life assessment and cost-effectiveness analysis in health economics and policy decision making. Currently, she focuses on the application of discrete event simulation for economic evaluation and optimization. Her field research includes the development of a breast cancer outcome & policy model, a community-based aging and care study and a burden of communicable disease study. Dr. Jahn is a lecturer at UMIT and coordinates the practical hands-on workshop 'Modeling Approaches for HTA' in the HTADS Program. She is also responsible for the scientific project management of Area 4 'Decision-Analytic Outcome Modeling, Health Technology Assessment and Health Economics' in the ONCOTYROL Center for Personalized Cancer Medicine Research. Her research has been presented at international conferences and published in scientific articles. She held a pre-conference workshop on Discrete Event Simulation at the European Meeting of the Society for Medical Decision Making in 2008.

Mirjam Kretzschmar, PhD

Mirjam Kretzschmar studied Mathematics at the Universities of Mainz and Tübingen, Germany, followed by a doctorate in Mathematics in 1987. Subsequent to gaining her doctorate, she carried out post-doctoral work in the United States (Cornell University), Scotland (Strathclyde University, Glasgow), and the Netherlands (Centre for Mathematics and Informatics, Amsterdam). From 1992 to 2005, Dr. Kretzschmar was a researcher and Project Leader at the National Institute of Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), the Netherlands, in the field of mathematical modelling of infectious diseases and control. From 2005 to 2007 she held a position as an associate professor at the School of Public Health, University of Bielefeld, Germany. Since 2008, she has a joint position as a senior researcher and project leader at the Centre for Infectious Disease Control, RIVM, Bilthoven, and as an associate professor at the Julius Centre for Health Sciences and Primary Care, University Medical Centre Utrecht, both in the Netherlands.

Dr. Kretzschmar is on the editorial boards of the international journals Mathematical Biosciences and BMC Infectious Diseases. She holds the certificate for epidemiology of the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Medizinische Informatik, Biometrie und Epidemiologie (GMDS). She is a member of the Health Council of the Netherlands (a scientific advisory body for the Dutch Ministry of Health) in the Standing Committee 'Infection and Immunity' and member of several other advisory boards. She is regularly reviewing for numerous international scientific journals and has organised scientific meetings, workshops and summer schools. She has extensive teaching experience in undergraduate and graduate courses. She is the coordinator of the Utrecht Centre for Infection Dynamics, a research collaboration in the area of mathematical modeling of infectious disease epidemiology at Utrecht University. Dr Kretzschmar has published in the area of statistical and mathematical analysis of spread and control infectious diseases, and health economic evaluation of infectious disease control. Her main research areas are sexually transmitted diseases and HIV/AIDS, sexual and contact networks, and vaccine-preventable diseases.

Gord Blackhouse, BComm, MBA, MSc

Gord Blackhouse currently manages the Health Technology Assessment Program.  His expertise in the area of economic evaluation of health care technologies includes the development of decision analytic models and patient level analysis. He is a part-time faculty member of the Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics at McMaster University, and received his MBA and MSc from McMaster University.


DATE of COURSE & LOCATION
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Date of the Course
27- 29 May 2010

Course Location
UMIT Campus - University for Health Sciences, Medical Informatics and Technology
Eduard Wallnoefer Center 1
6060 Hall i.T. (close to Innsbruck), Austria

UMIT
Pictures of the UMIT-Campus
Pictures of Hall i.T. 


REGISTRATION
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Please note, that the online registration is closed.
If you are interested in participating in the First Certified Course "Modeling Workshop for HTA: a Practical Hands-On Workshop", we would kindly ask you to contact
htads@umit.at or +43 508648 3939.
Thank you very much for your interest.


PAYMENT DETAILS
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Registration fees
 

Course fee (public/academic sector):  Euro 1950
 before 28 Feb 2010:  Euro 1550
Course fee (commercial sector):  Euro 3850
 before 28 Feb 2010:  Euro 2950

VAT is not payable.
Course fees include a comprehensive syllabus, an extensive binder with background reading material, course certificate, snacks and lunch, but not accommodation.
 
Method of Payment

Payment must be made by bank transfer. After registration, participants will be provided with the payment details via e-mail.
 
Cancellation Policy

A full refund of course fees (less 15% administrative charges) will be made for cancellations received in writing at least one month prior to the workshop. Substitutes can be made but please email new delegates details when known. Cancellations made less than one month prior to the course are non-refundable/non-changeable.
In the unlikely event that, due to unforeseen circumstances, the course has to be cancelled by the UMIT, our liability is limited to refund of course fees only. We recommend that delegates have adequate insurance cover to claim any travel or personal expenses.


ACCOMODATIONS & DIRECTIONS
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Accommodation

There are a number of hotels near the campus. Reservations should be made when you receive your registration and payment confirmation. We have made special arrangements with hotels near the course location. After registration, you will receive more details regarding accommodation via e-mail.

Travelling to Hall and UMIT

Plan your route to UMIT

City of Hall and Innsbruck

Hall is a historical city and is located 10 km east of the Tyrols capital, Innsbruck. Hall became known early on in the middle ages as an important coin pressing and trade city.
Innsbruck was the host city of the Olympic winter games in 1964 and 1976 and is famous for its charming old town and the golden roof.

For further information please visit


CONTACT
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Institute of Public Health, Medical Decision Making and HTA
Continuing Education Program on HTA & Decision Sciences (HTADS)
UMIT - University for Health Sciences Medical Informatics and Technology
Eduard Wallnoefer Center I
A-6060 Hall i.T., Austria
Tel.: +43 50 8648-3930
Fax: +43 50 8648-673901
E-mail: htads@umit.at

 
Funded in part by the Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health (CADTH) and ONCOTYROL - Center for Personalized Cancer Medicine *
 
* ONCOTYROL is a K1-COMET Center and funded by the Federal Ministry for Transport Innovation and Technology (BMVIT) and the Federal Ministry of Economics and Labour/the Federal Ministry of Economy, Family and Youth (BMWA/BMWFJ), the Tyrolean Future Foundation (TZS) and the State of Styria represented by the Styrian Business Promotion Agency (SFG) and supported by UMIT - University for Health Sciences, Medical Informatics and Technology and TILAK-Hospital Holding Company.'