Publikasi Scopus 2024 per tanggal 30 November 2024 (994 artikel)

Nugraha R.R.; Suharlim C.; Prawiranegara R.; Putra A.L.; Sayekti M.A.; Armansyah A.; Masytoh L.S.; Saxena S.; Susanto A.; Langerbrunner J.C.; Rahmayanti N.M.; Choi M.; Wiweko B.; Hidayat B.
Nugraha, Ryan Rachmad (57264816700); Suharlim, Christian (56196747400); Prawiranegara, Rozar (56585988100); Putra, Arry Lesmana (59400911100); Sayekti, Mutia A. (59401147500); Armansyah, Armansyah (57225098604); Masytoh, Lusiana Siti (57194227773); Saxena, Sweta (57200290747); Susanto, Anastasia (59400554400); Langerbrunner, John C. (59401031100); Rahmayanti, Nurul Maretia (57988225300); Choi, Miyoung (57129603200); Wiweko, Budi (43061741400); Hidayat, Budi (56618124600)
57264816700; 56196747400; 56585988100; 59400911100; 59401147500; 57225098604; 57194227773; 57200290747; 59400554400; 59401031100; 57988225300; 57129603200; 43061741400; 56618124600
A framework for improved collaboration on HTA in the Asia-Pacific region: A role for HTAsiaLink
2024
International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care
40
1
e43
0
Management Sciences for Health (MSH), Arlington, VA, United States; Center for Health Financing and Policy, Ministry of Health Government of Indonesia, Jakarta, Indonesia; United States Agency for International Development, Bureau for Asia/Technical Services, Washington, DC, United States; United States Agency for International Development, Health Office, Jakarta, Indonesia; National Evidence-Based Healthcare Collaborating Agency (NECA), South Korea; Indonesian Health Technological Assessment Committee (InaHTAc), Jakarta, Indonesia; Indonesia Medical Education Research Institute, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Indonesia-Dr. Cipto Mangunkusumo General Hospital Jakarta, Jakarta, Indonesia; Department of Health Policy and Administration, Faculty of Public Health, University of Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia
Nugraha R.R., Management Sciences for Health (MSH), Arlington, VA, United States; Suharlim C., Management Sciences for Health (MSH), Arlington, VA, United States; Prawiranegara R., Management Sciences for Health (MSH), Arlington, VA, United States; Putra A.L., Management Sciences for Health (MSH), Arlington, VA, United States; Sayekti M.A., Management Sciences for Health (MSH), Arlington, VA, United States; Armansyah A., Center for Health Financing and Policy, Ministry of Health Government of Indonesia, Jakarta, Indonesia; Masytoh L.S., Center for Health Financing and Policy, Ministry of Health Government of Indonesia, Jakarta, Indonesia; Saxena S., United States Agency for International Development, Bureau for Asia/Technical Services, Washington, DC, United States; Susanto A., United States Agency for International Development, Health Office, Jakarta, Indonesia; Langerbrunner J.C., United States Agency for International Development, Health Office, Jakarta, Indonesia; Rahmayanti N.M., United States Agency for International Development, Health Office, Jakarta, Indonesia; Choi M., National Evidence-Based Healthcare Collaborating Agency (NECA), South Korea; Wiweko B., Indonesian Health Technological Assessment Committee (InaHTAc), Jakarta, Indonesia, Indonesia Medical Education Research Institute, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Indonesia-Dr. Cipto Mangunkusumo General Hospital Jakarta, Jakarta, Indonesia; Hidayat B., Indonesian Health Technological Assessment Committee (InaHTAc), Jakarta, Indonesia, Department of Health Policy and Administration, Faculty of Public Health, University of Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia
Countries frequently use health technology assessment (HTA) to set priorities for introducing new interventions or evaluating existing interventions; however, applying the tool effectively is heavily dependent on a country's resources and capacity. Infrastructure and data, technical expertise, broad stakeholder involvement, and financial support are required to improve HTA processes. In the Asia-Pacific, HTAsiaLink was established to facilitate this practice, but strengthening and legitimizing this organization are needed to maximize its potential to support HTA institutionalization in the region. To realize this objective, HTAsiaLink can serve as a center of excellence while providing experiential learning and sharing information. As a learning hub, HTAsiaLink can share resources-particularly data-that can contribute to joint HTAs as done in the European Union and strengthen capacity in countries needing to develop their HTA expertise. © The Author(s), 2024.
capacity building; health technology assessment; HTAsiaLink; knowledge exchange; regional network
Asia; Cooperative Behavior; Humans; International Cooperation; Stakeholder Participation; Technology Assessment, Biomedical; Knowledge transfer; Asia Pacific region; Assessment process; Capacity building; Financial support; Health technology assessments; Htasialink; Knowledge exchange; Regional networks; Stakeholder involvement; Technical expertise; biomedical technology assessment; capacity building; European Union; experiential learning; human; infrastructure; institutionalization; review; stakeholder participation; Asia; cooperation; international cooperation; organization and management; Decentralized finance
Cambridge University Press
02664623
39494832
Review
Q2
846
5715