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. 2017 Jan 6;26(4):287–309. doi: 10.1007/s10728-016-0337-z

Table 5.

Possible implications of cost-equivalence for IVF policy

Pure cost-equivalence Cost-effectiveness equivalence (or CETE)
1. Equal access to IVF (regardless of age)
2. Prognosis-adjustment. The quantity of publicly funded IVF could be linked more directly to the probability of live birth, and take into account a wider range of factors predicting probability of live birth
3. Co-payment. Patients would pay a variable co-payment to reflect the chance of live birth. Those with a low chance of live birth would pay a larger proportion of the cost of providing IVF
4. Discounted IVF. If cheaper forms of IVF become available, women with lower chance of live birth would be able to access CEE equivalent IVF by using cheaper techniques (e.g. [4])
5. Permit publicly funded IVF using donor eggs for older women*

* The chance of live birth using donor eggs appears to be related to donor age, not maternal age [30, 42]. If the justification for denying IVF to older women is on the basis of reduced chance of live birth, it would be potentially cost-equivalent to provide access to IVF using donor eggs (once the cost of oocyte donation is factored in)