technological effectiveness - meaning and definition. What is technological effectiveness
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What (who) is technological effectiveness - definition

COMPARISON OF COSTS AND OUTCOMES OF DIFFERENT COURSES OF ACTION
Cost effectiveness; Cost effective; Cost-effective; Cost-effectiveness; Cost effectiveness analysis; CEA Registry; Cost-Effectiveness Analysis Registry; Cost-Effectiveness Registry

Educator effectiveness         
IMPACT OF A TEACHER
User:Schmittkr17/sandbox/draft EducatorEffectiveness; Educator Effectiveness
Educator effectiveness is a United States K-12 school system education policy initiative that measures the quality of an educator performance in terms of improving student learning. It describes a variety of methods, such as observations, student assessments, student work samples and examples of teacher work, that education leaders use to determine the effectiveness of a K-12 educator.
Technological change         
  • Technological change can cause the [[production-possibility frontier]] to shift outward, allowing economic growth.
  • Original model of three phases of the process of Technological Change
PROCESS OF INVENTION, INNOVATION AND DIFFUSION OF TECHNOLOGY OR PROCESSES
Neutral technological change; Techological progress; Harrod neutral; Harrod-neutral; Technology change; Technological change as a social process; ACCTO criteria; Technical development; Technological improvements; Technological improvement
Technological change (TC) or technological development is the overall process of invention, innovation and diffusion of technology or processes.Derived from Jaffe et al.
Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio         
STATISTIC USED IN COST-EFFECTIVENESS ANALYSIS TO SUMMARISE THE COST-EFFECTIVENESS OF A HEALTH CARE INTERVENTION
Incremental cost effectiveness
The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) is a statistic used in cost-effectiveness analysis to summarise the cost-effectiveness of a health care intervention. It is defined by the difference in cost between two possible interventions, divided by the difference in their effect.

Wikipedia

Cost-effectiveness analysis

Cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) is a form of economic analysis that compares the relative costs and outcomes (effects) of different courses of action. Cost-effectiveness analysis is distinct from cost–benefit analysis, which assigns a monetary value to the measure of effect. Cost-effectiveness analysis is often used in the field of health services, where it may be inappropriate to monetize health effect. Typically the CEA is expressed in terms of a ratio where the denominator is a gain in health from a measure (years of life, premature births averted, sight-years gained) and the numerator is the cost associated with the health gain. The most commonly used outcome measure is quality-adjusted life years (QALY).

Cost–utility analysis is similar to cost-effectiveness analysis. Cost-effectiveness analyses are often visualized on a plane consisting of four quadrants, the cost represented on one axis and the effectiveness on the other axis. Cost-effectiveness analysis focuses on maximising the average level of an outcome, distributional cost-effectiveness analysis extends the core methods of CEA to incorporate concerns for the distribution of outcomes as well as their average level and make trade-offs between equity and efficiency, these more sophisticated methods are of particular interest when analysing interventions to tackle health inequality.