CHE seminar - Unpaid carers' health-related quality of life: analysis and inclusion in economic evaluation
Seminar
Event date
Thursday 5 March 2026, 2pm to 3pm
Location
ARC/014, Alcuin Research Resource Centre, Campus West, University of York (Map)
Audience
Open to staff, students (postgraduate researchers only)
Admission
Free admission, booking not required
Event details
Abstract:
Economic evaluation is used to determine the most efficient use of resources by comparing the costs and outcomes of different interventions. Outcomes are usually measured by health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and may include both patients and unpaid carers’ HRQoL. Prior research found that incorporating carer’s HRQoL in economic evaluations is uncommon, inconsistent, and relies on limited data and strong assumptions.
A key consideration is whether caregiving causally affects carer’s HRQoL. My literature review indicates a lack of robust evidence. Generally, longitudinal studies suggest a detrimental effect on health/wellbeing, but the benefits derived from caregiving may mitigate its negative effects.
A key consideration is whether caregiving causally affects carer’s HRQoL. My literature review indicates a lack of robust evidence. Generally, longitudinal studies suggest a detrimental effect on health/wellbeing, but the benefits derived from caregiving may mitigate its negative effects.
Analysis of longitudinal data for patient-carer dyads and found carers’ HRQoL decreased as the patients’ HRQoL decreased and as the duration of care increased. Analysis of a cross-sectional EQ-5D dataset found people providing more hours of care per week have worse HRQoL, even after adjusting for confounders. Both analyses suggest a causal effect of caring on HRQoL and provide inputs for use in economic evaluations in any adult health condition.
Current methods for modelling carers’ HRQoL assume the effect of caring on HRQoL is unidirectional: a negative effect implies any extension to patient survival leads to a carers’ quality-adjusted life year (QALY) loss, a positive effect implies any extension to patient survival leads to a carers’ QALY gain. These approaches force a choice between carers maximising their own HRQoL or the patients’ HRQoL. A new modelling method allows a trade-off between the positive carer’s HRQoL effect of improving patients’ HRQoL and the negative carers’ HRQoL effect of increasing caregiving burden.
This work demonstrated that it is possible to identify a causal effect of caring and created a method to include this in economic evaluation. Future research can build on this to address data gaps and explore the transferability of evidence.
If you are not a member of University of York staff and are interested in attending a seminar, please contact sumit.mazumdar@york.ac.uk or joe.spearing@york.ac.uk so that we can ensure we have sufficient space. Please also use these contacts if you wish to be added to the mailing list.
About the speaker
Becky Pennington, University of Sheffield
Becky has just completed her PhD on including unpaid carers' health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in economic evaluation for health technology assessment. Prior to undertaking her PhD, Becky worked as part of the Decision Support Unit, and has prior experience working in consultancy and at NICE. Becky has served as a health economist on NICE Technology Appraisal Committee A for 5 years. Becky will present a summary of her PhD research, including econometric analysis of unpaid carers' HRQoL and methods for including carers' HRQoL in economic models.
Venue details
Wheelchair accessible
No hearing loop
Contact
For more information on these seminars, contact Sumit Mazumdar or Joe Spearing.