Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation

Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation
Country
Agency
Status
Link
Details on adaptation process
Austria
GOEG
2017
The report was disseminated in a newsletter to decision-makers and relevant stakeholders
Austria
LBI-HTA
2017
http://eprints.hta.lbg.ac.at/1130
National adaptation. Made no changes to the EUnetHTA report, added a German summary
Belgium
KCE
2017
https://kce.fgov.be/en/repetitive-transcranial-magnetic-stimulation-for-treatment-resistant-major-depression-effectiveness
Key messages and summary of the EUnetHTA assessment. Update to previous work on a similar area.
Croatia
AAZ
2017
A summary of the report was prepared in the national language, as well as assessment elements B0001 and A0020, with links to the full report on English language. Upon Croatian decision makers request on this topic, the report will be updated if needed and local information will be added (i.e., epidemiological information such as patient numbers; the technologies available in Croatia, information about costs…), including recommendations. This specific document was used also to demonstrate the importance of joint international HTA process and the challenges that need to be overcome at a national level to introduce a sustainable and mandatory HTA process within reimbursement/investment or disinvestment decision processes, at Ministry of Health meeting related to HTA, in 2017 (policy issue).
Denmark
DEFACTUM
Ongoing
National adaptation, translation of the EUnetHTA assessment
Italy
AGENAS
Ongoing
Ongoing: National Adaptation
Italy
ASSR-RER
2018
Dissemination through our website: alert of publication and link to document; summary and results reported on news page. Adaptation planned for 2018.
Spain
OSTEBA
2017
Adoption proposal in the updating of the CPG about Traumatic Brain Injury published in 2007 by the Basque Health Service. Dissemination through our Webpage, Linked in and Facebook.
UK
NICE
2017
https://www.evidence.nhs.uk/Search?q=EUnetHTA
EUnetHTA reports are indexed in NHS Evidence, a public database which provides access to selected sources of evidence in health, social case and public health.
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