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2.
J Med Ethics ; 34(8): 598-601, 2008 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18667648

ABSTRACT

A repudiation of Muireann Quigley's argument that the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) values and assesses the worth of people's lives; together with an alternative account of what it appears that NICE actually does, why these procedures are not unreasonable and some of the unresolved problems, especially when making interpersonal comparisons of health, which remain for NICE or, indeed, anyone seeking to determine the contents of the benefits bundles of a public health insurance programme such as the NHS. Some other ethically dubious propositions by Dr Quigley are also rejected.


Subject(s)
Quality of Health Care/standards , Quality-Adjusted Life Years , State Medicine/standards , Decision Making, Organizational , Health Care Rationing/economics , Health Care Rationing/ethics , Humans , Quality of Health Care/ethics , State Medicine/ethics , United Kingdom
3.
J Med Ethics ; 32(7): 373-7; discussion 378-80, 2006 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16816034

ABSTRACT

A rebuttal is provided to each of the arguments adduced by John Harris, an Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Medical Ethics, in two editorials in the journal in support of the view that National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence's procedures and methods for making recommendations about healthcare procedures for use in the National Health Service in England and Wales are the product of "wickedness or folly or more likely both", "ethically illiterate as well as socially divisive", responsible for the "perversion of science as well as of morality" and are "contrary to basic morality and contrary to human rights".


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care/ethics , Health Services Accessibility/ethics , Academies and Institutes/ethics , Cost-Benefit Analysis/methods , Delivery of Health Care/economics , Drug Therapy/economics , Drug Therapy/ethics , Health Services Accessibility/economics , Humans , Moral Obligations , Prejudice , Quality of Health Care/economics , Quality of Health Care/ethics , Quality-Adjusted Life Years , State Medicine , United Kingdom
5.
J Med Ethics ; 27(4): 275-83, 2001 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11479360

ABSTRACT

This essay seeks to characterise the essential features of an equitable health care system in terms of the classical Aristotelian concepts of horizontal and vertical equity, the common (but ill-defined) language of "need" and the economic notion of cost-effectiveness as a prelude to identifying some of the more important issues of value that policy-makers will have to decide for themselves; the characteristics of health (and what determines it) that can cause policy to be ineffective (or have undesired consequences); the information base that is required to support a policy directed at securing greater equity, and the kinds of research (theoretical and empirical) that are needed to underpin such a policy.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care/economics , Delivery of Health Care/standards , Health Care Rationing/standards , Health Services Needs and Demand , Social Justice , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Health Policy , State Medicine/economics , State Medicine/standards , United Kingdom
11.
Lancet ; 344(8939-8940): 1774, 1994.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7997026
12.
J Health Econ ; 12(4): 431-57, 1993 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10131755

ABSTRACT

This paper explores four definitions of equity in health care: equality of utilization, distribution according to need, equality of access, and equality of health. We argue that the definitions of 'need' in the literature are inadequate and propose a new definition. We also argue that, irrespective of how need and access are defined, the four definitions of equity are, in general, mutually incompatible. In contrast to previous authors, we suggest that equality of health should be the dominant principle and that equity in health care should therefore entail distributing care in such a way as to get as close as is feasible to an equal distribution of health.


Subject(s)
Health Expenditures , Health Services Accessibility/economics , Health Services Needs and Demand/economics , Resource Allocation , Social Justice/economics , Cost-Benefit Analysis/statistics & numerical data , Data Collection , Health Care Rationing/economics , Health Care Rationing/standards , Health Services Accessibility/statistics & numerical data , Health Services Needs and Demand/statistics & numerical data , Health Services Research , Models, Statistical , United Kingdom
13.
J Health Econ ; 12(3): 311-23, 1993 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10129839

ABSTRACT

This paper explores the claim that QALYs are liable to misrepresent consumer preferences and hence lead to decision-makers choosing options which are not those preferred by the public. It also considers the claim that HYEs do not suffer from this defect. We argue that none of the examples offered to date demonstrate the alleged tendency of QALYs to misrepresent preferences. We also show that HYEs are identical to QALY scores obtained from a time tradeoff experiment and therefore that the assumptions about preferences underlying HYEs are just as restrictive as those underlying TTO-based QALYs.


Subject(s)
Consumer Behavior , Outcome Assessment, Health Care/economics , Quality of Life , Value of Life , Cost-Benefit Analysis/methods , Decision Making , Humans , Time Factors , United Kingdom
16.
Health Econ ; 1(1): 7-18, 1992 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1342632

ABSTRACT

There are some general considerations which have implications for the delivery and finance of health care in all countries, not only Canada and the USA. Beginning with two propositions: that access to health care is a right of citizenship, which should not depend on individual income and wealth; and that the objective of health services is to maximise the impact on the nation's health of the resources available; the paper examines the ethical justification for pursuing efficiency in health care provision. The different meanings of efficiency are discussed in detail, and the use of quantitative indicators of health benefit, such as the QALY, placed in context. It is argued that the determination of health care resource allocations should take account of costs at both the macro planning level and the micro level of the individual doctor-patient relationship. Given the starting points the overall conclusion is that it is ethical to be efficient, since to be inefficient implies failure to achieve the ethical objective of maximising health benefits from available resources.


Subject(s)
Efficiency, Organizational , Ethics, Medical , Health Care Rationing/standards , Health Services Accessibility/standards , Value of Life , Canada , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Health Care Costs , Health Care Rationing/economics , Health Services Accessibility/economics , Health Services Accessibility/organization & administration , Health Services Needs and Demand , Humans , Income , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Physician-Patient Relations , Poverty , Quality of Life , United Kingdom , United States
17.
J Health Polit Policy Law ; 17(4): 667-88, 1992.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1299685

ABSTRACT

The British National Health Service (NHS) has, since its inception, aimed to make health care available to all regardless of income, and it has managed to achieve this goal while keeping costs lower as a proportion of the gross domestic product than many Western countries and at the same time assuring equitable distribution of resources regionally. Until the reforms introduced by the 1989 White Paper, the NHS was characterized by centralized financing and regulation; despite some problems in the delivery and management of care, the system was a popular one. The new reforms hope to enhance efficiency in the NHS by stimulating competition and further decentralizing the management of health care. However, it is not at all certain that in practice the reforms will have the desired effect. Initial costs will be high, people may not respond to incentives as predicted, and the quality of care and access to it could well deteriorate. Nations planning to use the U.K. system as a model are advised to use caution.


Subject(s)
Health Policy , State Medicine , Community Health Services , Cost Control , Economic Competition , Financing, Organized , Health Care Rationing , Health Expenditures , Health Resources , Health Services Needs and Demand , Hospital Administration , Hospitals , Humans , Organizational Objectives , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Physician-Patient Relations , Primary Health Care , Private Practice , Quality of Health Care , Quality of Life , Regional Medical Programs , State Medicine/economics , State Medicine/organization & administration , United Kingdom
19.
In. Baldwin, Sally; Godfrey, Christine; Propper, Carol. Quality of life: perspectives and policies. London, Routledge, 1990. p.9-27.
Monography in English | CidSaúde - Healthy cities | ID: cid-15611
20.
Health Care Financ Rev ; Spec No: 21-32, 1989 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10313433

ABSTRACT

Health care cost containment is not in itself a sensible policy objective, because any assessment of the appropriateness of health care expenditure in aggregate, as of that on specific programs, requires a balancing of costs and benefits at the margin. International data on expenditures can, however, provide indications of the likely impact on costs and expenditures of structural features of health care systems. Data from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development for both European countries and a wider set are reviewed, and some current policies in Europe that are directed at controlling health care costs are outlined.


Subject(s)
Cost Control , Health Expenditures/statistics & numerical data , Health Policy/economics , Cross-Cultural Comparison , Europe , Financial Management, Hospital , Regression Analysis
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