Economical in terms of the goods or services received for the money spent.
costeffectively cost'-ef·fec'tive·ly adv.costeffectiveness cost'-ef·fec'tive·ness n.
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Dictionary:
cost-ef·fec·tive (kôst'ĭ-fĕk'tĭv) |
Economical in terms of the goods or services received for the money spent.
costeffectively cost'-ef·fec'tive·ly adv.| 5min Related Video: cost-effective |
| Business Dictionary: Cost-Effectiveness |
Ability to generate sufficient value to offset an activity's cost. The value can be interpreted as revenue in the case of a business.
| Accounting Dictionary: Cost Effective |
Among decision alternatives, the one whose cost is lower than its benefit. The most cost effective program would be the one whose cost-benefit ratio is the lowest among various programs competing for a given amount of funds. See also Cost-Benefit Analysis.
| Dental Dictionary: cost-effective |
The minimal expenditure of dollars, time, and other elements necessary to achieve the health care result deemed necessary and appropriate.
| Encyclopedia of Public Health: Cost-Effectiveness |
Society confronts many difficult choices in the provision of health care services and public health programs. Many options exist for resolving these choices, though none without compromise. To make informed choices, we need information about the impact of services and programs, their costs, and the consequences of choosing one option over another. One tool for combining these three pieces of information is called cost-effectiveness analysis. The term "cost-effective" describes the dominating option in such an analysis. Thus, for a given cost, program A is cost-effective if its impact is greater than that of program B, all other factors being equal. Or for a given level of impact, program A is cost-effective if its cost is less than program B, all other factors being equal.
"Cost-effective" options may vary among groups in society because they assess costs or value life, improved health outcomes, or other consequences differently. The U.S. Congress, business leaders, managed care organizations, pharmaceutical industry, and the public may all view an analysis differently because they seek different societal objectives. The common meaning, however, is "value for money." Differences in how various groups view a particular program reflect how different alternatives or aspects of alternatives are valued.
Cost-effectiveness analysis is an analytical tool whose purpose is to provide information about the relative value of different approaches to eliminating disparities, increasing life expectancy, or any program or initiative. The imprecision associated with the term "cost-effective" comes in part from how cost-effectiveness analysis has evolved. This tool has been crafted by analysts from many different disciplines, including economics, medicine, public health, sociology, operations research, and ethics. Each discipline contributes a particular set of concepts and language, which have been melded together to build cost-effectiveness analysis.
(SEE ALSO: Beneficence; Benefit-Cost Analysis; Benefits, Ethics, and Risks; Personal Health Services)
— R. BURCIAGA VALDEZ
| Translations: Cost-effective |
Dansk (Danish)
adj. - omkostningseffektiv
Français (French)
adj. - rentable
Deutsch (German)
adj. - rentabel
Ελληνική (Greek)
adj. - με αποδοτικότητα κόστους, που παρέχει επαρκή έσοδα σε σχέση με τις δαπάνες
Italiano (Italian)
redditizio, efficiente
Português (Portuguese)
adj. - custo-eficiente
Русский (Russian)
рентабельный
Español (Spanish)
adj. - costo-efectividad
Svenska (Swedish)
adj. - lönande, kostnadseffektiv
中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
成本效益高的, 经济的, 上算的, 划得来的
中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
adj. - 成本效益高的, 經濟的, 上算的, 划得來的
العربيه (Arabic)
(صفه) فائدته تفوق كلفته
עברית (Hebrew)
adj. - משתלם, רווחי
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![]() | Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Read more | |
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