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Dive into the research topics where Jean-Eric Tarride is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean-Eric Tarride.


Current Medical Research and Opinion | 2005

The economic burden of schizophrenia in Canada in 2004.

Ron Goeree; Farah Farahati; Natasha Burke; Gordon Blackhouse; Daria O'Reilly; Jeffrey M. Pyne; Jean-Eric Tarride

ABSTRACT Objective: To estimate the financial burden of schizophrenia in Canada in 2004. Methods: A prevalence-based cost-of-illness (COI) approach was used. The primary sources of information for the study included a review of the published literature, a review of published reports and documents, secondary analysis of administrative datasets, and information collected directly from various federal and provincial government programs and services. The literature review included publications up to April 2005 reported in MedLine, EMBASE and PsychINFO. Where specific information from a province was not available, the method of mean substitution from other provinces was used. Costs incurred by various levels/departments of government were separated into healthcare and non-healthcare costs. Also included in the analysis was the value of lost productivity for premature mortality and morbidity associated with schizophrenia. Sensitivity analysis was used to test major cost assumptions used in the analysis. Where possible, all resource utilization estimates for the financial burden of schizophrenia were obtained for 2004 and are expressed in 2004 Canadian dollars (CAN


Canadian Journal of Cardiology | 2009

A review of the cost of cardiovascular disease

Jean-Eric Tarride; Morgan Lim; Marie DesMeules; Wei Luo; Natasha Burke; Daria O’Reilly; James M. Bowen; Ron Goeree

). Results: The estimated number of persons with schizophrenia in Canada in 2004 was 234 305 (95% CI, 136 201–333 402). The direct healthcare and non-healthcare costs were estimated to be CAN


Current Medical Research and Opinion | 2007

Transferability of economic evaluations : approaches and factors to consider when using results from one geographic area for another

Ron Goeree; Natasha Burke; Daria O'Reilly; Andrea Manca; Gord Blackhouse; Jean-Eric Tarride

2.02 billion in 2004. There were 374 deaths attributed to schizophrenia. This combined with the high unemployment rate due to schizophrenia resulted in an additional productivity morbidity and mortality loss estimate of CAN


Value in Health | 2010

Analysis of Health Utility Data When Some Subjects Attain the Upper Bound of 1: Are Tobit and CLAD Models Appropriate?

Eleanor Pullenayegum; Jean-Eric Tarride; Feng Xie; Ron Goeree; Hertzel C. Gerstein; Daria O'Reilly

4.83 billion, for a total cost estimate in 2004 of CAN


Osteoporosis International | 2012

The burden of illness of osteoporosis in Canada.

Jean-Eric Tarride; Rob Hopkins; William D. Leslie; Suzanne Morin; Jonathan D. Adachi; Alexandra Papaioannou; Louis Bessette; Jacques P. Brown; Ron Goeree

6.85 billion. By far the largest component of the total cost estimate was for productivity losses associated with morbidity in schizophrenia (70% of total costs) and the results showed that total cost estimates were most sensitive to alternative assumptions regarding the additional unemployment due to schizophrenia in Canada. Conclusions: Despite significant improvements in the past decade in pharmacotherapy, programs and services available for patients with schizophrenia, the economic burden of schizophrenia in Canada remains high. The most significant factor affecting the cost of schizophrenia in Canada is lost productivity due to morbidity. Programs targeted at improving patient symptoms and functioning to increase workforce participation has the potential to make a significant contribution in reducing the cost of this severe mental illness in Canada.


Urology | 2010

Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Transurethral Resection of the Prostate Versus Minimally Invasive Procedures for the Treatment of Benign Prostatic Obstruction

Natasha Burke; J. Paul Whelan; Linda Goeree; Robert Hopkins; Kaitryn Campbell; Ron Goeree; Jean-Eric Tarride

In Canada, 74,255 deaths (33% of all deaths) in 2003 were due to cardio-vascular disease (CVD). As one of the most costly diseases, CVD represents a major economic burden on health care systems. The purpose of the present study was to review the literature on the economic costs of CVD in Canada and other developed countries (United States, Europe and Australia) published from 1998 to 2006, with a focus on Canada. Of 1656 screened titles and abstracts, 34 articles were reviewed including six Canadian studies and 17 American studies. While considerable variation was observed among studies, all studies indicated that the costs of treating CVD-related conditions are significant, outlining a convincing case for CVD prevention programs.


Health and Quality of Life Outcomes | 2010

A review of health utilities across conditions common in paediatric and adult populations.

Jean-Eric Tarride; Natasha Burke; Matthias Bischof; Robert Hopkins; Linda Goeree; Kaitryn Campbell; Feng Xie; Daria O'Reilly; Ron Goeree

ABSTRACT Background: Geographic transferability of economic evaluation data from one country to another has the potential to make a more efficient use of national and international evaluation resources. However, inappropriate transferability of economic data can provide misleading results and lead to an inefficient use of scarce health care resources. Objectives: The objective of this study was to review, summarize and categorize the literature on: (i) factors affecting the geographic transferability of economic evaluation data; and (ii) approaches which have either been proposed or used for transferability. Methods: A systematic literature review on transferability was conducted. Electronic databases, hand searching and bibliographic searching techniques were utilized. Inclusion criteria for the review included conceptual or empirical papers with mention of factors affecting, or approaches for, transferability of economic evaluation data across geographic locations. Exclusion criteria included papers published prior to 1966, non-English language papers, pure science studies and animal studies. Three databases were involved in the primary search: Ovid MEDLINE, EMBASE, and CINAHL. In addition to the primary search, the Heath Economic Evaluation Database (OHE HEED), the NHS EED database and the EconLit databases were searched. Transferability factors were classified into major and minor categories, a classification of alternative transferability approaches was developed, and the number of empirical studies was catalogued according to this classification. Results: There is a substantial amount of literature on factors potentially affecting transferability. Based on these papers we identified 77 factors and subsequently developed a classification system which grouped these factors into five broad categories based on characteristics of the patient, the disease, the provider, the health care system and methodological conventions. Another 40 studies were identified which attempted to transfer economic evaluation data from one country to another and these were classified according to the sources for clinical efficacy, resource utilization and unit cost data. Conclusions: There is strong evidence indicating that transferability of economic evaluation data is a difficult and complex task. Approaches which have been used for transferability suggest that, at a minimum, there is a need for country-specific substitution of practice pattern data as well as unit cost data. A limitation of this review relates to the lack of empirical studies which prevents stronger conclusions regarding which transferability factors are most important to consider and under which circumstances.


Current Medical Research and Opinion | 2008

The cost-effectiveness of palivizumab for respiratory syncytial virus prophylaxis in premature infants with a gestational age of 32–35 weeks: a Canadian-based analysis

Krista L. Lanctôt; Shababa T. Masoud; Bosco Paes; Jean-Eric Tarride; Aaron Chiu; Charles Hui; Philip L Francis; Paul Oh

BACKGROUND Health utility data often show an apparent truncation effect, where a proportion of individuals achieve the upper bound of 1. The Tobit model and censored least absolute deviations (CLAD) have both been used as analytic solutions to this apparent truncation effect. These models assume that the observed utilities are censored at 1, and hence that the true utility can be greater than 1.We aimed to examine whether the Tobit and CLAD models yielded acceptable results when this censoring assumption was not appropriate. METHODS Using health utility (captured through EQ5D) data from a diabetes study, we conducted a simulation to compare the performance of the Tobit, CLAD, ordinary least squares (OLS), two-part and latent class estimators in terms of their bias and estimated confidence intervals. We also illustrate the performance of semiparametric and nonparametric bootstrap methods. RESULTS When the true utility was conceptually bounded above at 1, the Tobit and CLAD estimators were both biased. The OLS estimator was asymptotically unbiased and, while the model-based and semiparametric bootstrap confidence intervals were too narrow, confidence intervals based on the robust standard errors or the nonparametric bootstrap were acceptable for sample sizes of 100 and larger. Two-part and latent class models also yielded unbiased estimates. CONCLUSIONS When the intention of the analysis is to inform an economic evaluation, and the utilities should be bounded above at 1, CLAD, and Tobit methods were biased. OLS coupled with robust standard errors or the nonparametric bootstrap is recommended as a simple and valid approach.


ClinicoEconomics and Outcomes Research | 2011

Transferability of health technology assessments and economic evaluations: a systematic review of approaches for assessment and application

Ron Goeree; Jing He; Daria O'Reilly; Jean-Eric Tarride; Feng Xie; Morgan Lim; Natasha Burke

SummaryTo update the 1993 burden of illness of osteoporosis in Canada, administrative and community data were used to calculate the 2010 costs of osteoporosis at


PharmacoEconomics | 2010

A Review of Methods Used in Long-Term Cost-Effectiveness Models of Diabetes Mellitus Treatment

Jean-Eric Tarride; Robert Hopkins; Gord Blackhouse; James M. Bowen; Matthias Bischof; Camilla von Keyserlingk; Daria O'Reilly; Feng Xie; Ron Goeree

2.3 billion in Canada or 1.3% of Canada’s healthcare expenditures. Prevention of fractures in high-risk individuals is key to decrease the financial burden of osteoporosis.IntroductionSince the 1996 publication of the burden of osteoporosis in 1993 in Canada, the population has aged and the management of osteoporosis has changed. The study purpose was to estimate the current burden of illness due to osteoporosis in Canadians aged 50 and over.MethodsAnalyses were conducted using five national administrative databases from the Canadian Institute for Health Information for the fiscal-year ending March 31 2008 (FY 2007/2008). Gaps in national data were supplemented by provincial and community data extrapolated to national levels. Osteoporosis-related fractures were identified using a combination of most responsible diagnosis at discharge and intervention codes. Fractures associated with severe trauma codes were excluded. Costs, expressed in 2010 dollars, were calculated for osteoporosis-related hospitalizations, emergency care, same day surgeries, rehabilitation, continuing care, homecare, long-term care, prescription drugs, physician visits, and productivity losses. Sensitivity analyses were conducted to measure the impact on the results of key assumptions.ResultsOsteoporosis-related fractures were responsible for 57,413 acute care admissions and 832,594 hospitalized days in FY 2007/2008. Acute care costs were estimated at

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James M. Bowen

St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton

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Mark Oremus

University of Waterloo

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