Choudhry N, Slaughter P, Sykora K, Naylor C D
Clinical Epidemiology Unit, Sunnybrook Health Science Centre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
J Health Serv Res Policy. 1997 Oct;2(4):212-6. doi: 10.1177/135581969700200405.
To examine funding priorities assigned by health ministry officials when choosing between clinical programs that offer similar overall benefits distributed in different ways (e.g. large gains for a few versus small gains for many), and to compare the relative magnitude of any distributional bias to age biases.
A survey consisting of paired hypothetical health care programs was mailed to the 135 most senior officials of the Health Ministry in Ontario, Canada (population 11.5 million). Respondents were asked to assume they were members of a panel allocating a fixed sum of money to one of two programs in each pair. All program descriptions included the number of persons affected each year by a given disease and the average survival gains from the hypothetical programs. Some scenarios also mentioned the side-effects associated with programs and/or the average age of the beneficiaries.
Four respondents had retired/died. Of 131 eligible respondents, 80/131 (61%) provided usable responses. Asked to choose between providing large benefits to a few citizens and small benefits to a great many, 23% (95% CI: 14%, 33%) of respondents were unable to decide, but 55.8% (95% CI: 47%, 70%) favored providing large benefits to fewer patients. Eliminating the 23% unable to decide, 47/62 or 76% (CI 63%, 86% expressed a distributional preference. With a smaller distributional discrepancy, indecision increased, with 35% of respondents having no preference and the remainder split almost evenly between the two programs. Other scenarios showed that health officials' pro-youth biases were only slightly larger than their distributional preferences and that distributional preferences were magnified when combined with minor differences in average ages of beneficiaries.
A substantial minority of health care decision-makers had difficulty choosing between programs with similar overall gains and distributional differences--a result consistent with the utilitarian assumptions of cost-effectiveness analysis. However, when distributional differences were large, decision-makers clearly favored large gains for a few beneficiaries rather than small gains for many. Policy analysts should explicitly weigh distributional issues along with aggregate health gains when addressing resources allocation problems.
研究卫生部官员在选择临床项目时所确定的资金分配优先顺序,这些项目能带来相似的总体效益,但效益的分配方式不同(例如,少数人获得大幅收益与多数人获得小幅收益),并比较任何分配偏差与年龄偏差的相对大小。
一项包含成对假设医疗保健项目的调查被邮寄给加拿大安大略省卫生部的135名最高级官员(该省人口1150万)。受访者被要求假设他们是一个小组的成员,负责将一笔固定资金分配给每对中的两个项目之一。所有项目描述都包括每年受特定疾病影响的人数以及假设项目带来的平均生存获益。一些情景还提到了与项目相关的副作用和/或受益人的平均年龄。
4名受访者已退休/去世。在131名符合条件的受访者中,80/131(61%)提供了可用回复。当被要求在为少数公民提供大幅效益和为众多公民提供小幅效益之间做出选择时,23%(95%置信区间:14%,33%)的受访者无法做出决定,但55.8%(95%置信区间:47%,70%)倾向于为较少患者提供大幅效益。排除23%无法做出决定的受访者后,47/62或76%(置信区间63%,86%)表达了一种分配偏好。分配差异较小时,犹豫不决的情况增加,35%的受访者没有偏好,其余受访者在两个项目之间几乎平均分配。其他情景表明,卫生官员对年轻人的偏好仅略大于他们的分配偏好,并且当与受益人平均年龄的微小差异相结合时,分配偏好会被放大。
相当一部分医疗保健决策者在具有相似总体获益和分配差异的项目之间难以做出选择——这一结果与成本效益分析的功利主义假设一致。然而,当分配差异很大时,决策者明显倾向于为少数受益人提供大幅收益,而不是为多数人提供小幅收益。政策分析师在解决资源分配问题时应明确权衡分配问题以及总体健康获益。