HITAP is a Thailand-based nonprofit research organization focused on appraising health technologies, interventions, and policies through health technology assessment (HTA) and economic evaluation. The organization's tech stack—Stata, R, Word, Excel, and reference management tools (EndNote, Zotero, Mendeley)—reflects a research-driven operation centered on quantitative analysis and evidence synthesis. Active projects span national health insurance benefit design, health technology evaluation frameworks, and capacity-building initiatives, with particular focus on cost-effectiveness analysis and climate-health intersections.
HITAP was established in 2007 as a nonprofit organization to conduct rigorous appraisals of health technologies, medical devices, pharmaceuticals, health programs, and policy interventions. The organization operates across three core domains: health technology assessment, economic evaluation, and research-to-policy translation. HITAP advises on national health insurance systems, benefit package development, and resource allocation, working at the intersection of health systems efficiency and environmental sustainability. Based in Nonthaburi, Thailand, with a team of 51–200 employees, HITAP combines internal research capacity with regional and global outreach through training and dissemination networks.
HITAP conducts health technology assessment and economic evaluation to support evidence-based health policy. Specialties include HTA, health priority setting, economic evaluation, policy analysis, and capacity building for health systems in developing regions.
HITAP's primary tools are Stata and R for quantitative analysis, combined with Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, PowerPoint), SharePoint, Teams, and reference management software (EndNote, Zotero, Mendeley) for research organization and collaboration.
Active projects include developing benefit packages for national health insurance systems, building health technology evaluation frameworks, capacity-building initiatives, and research addressing cost-effective health interventions in climate adaptation contexts.
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