Essink-Bot Marie-Louise, Kruijshaar Michelle E, Barendregt Jan J, Bonneux Luc G A
Department of Public Health, Erasmus MC/University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Eur J Public Health. 2007 Jun;17(3):314-7. doi: 10.1093/eurpub/ckl238. Epub 2006 Oct 23.
Cardiovascular risk management guidelines are 'risk based'; health economists' practice is 'time based'. The 'medical' risk-based allocation model maximises numbers of deaths prevented by targeting subjects at high risk, for example, elderly and smokers. The time-based model maximises numbers of life years gained by treating the young and non-smokers, or 'the one who has will be given more' (Matthew 25:29). We explored practical consequences of risk- or time-based allocation.
We used epidemiological modelling to generate semi-quantitative scenarios comparing the distributional effects of allocating a fixed number of prescriptions of a (hypothetical) preventive cardiovascular drug ('CVStop') either to avert the maximum number of deaths (risk-based) or to save the maximum number of life years (time based) in the male Dutch population. We subsequently asked 123 Dutch guideline developers which distribution they preferred.
Time- and risk-based allocations resulted in different distributions of the drug across the population. There were also differences in absolute numbers of life years gained and deaths averted, and in the distribution of these across the population. For example, risk-based allocation of 'CVStop' resulted in preferential treatment of elderly, leading to more deaths averted (mostly among 70 and above) but fewer life years gained, if compared with time-based allocation. The guideline developers experienced the choice dilemmas as difficult. No priority choice was dominant among the respondents.
In evidence-based resource allocation the choice to save time or to avert deaths may introduce moral choices because of the various origins of increased disease risk. Evidence-based guideline development inevitably has moral implications.
心血管风险管理指南是“基于风险的”;卫生经济学家的做法是“基于时间的”。“医学上”基于风险的分配模式通过针对高危人群(例如老年人和吸烟者)来使预防的死亡人数最大化。基于时间的模式通过治疗年轻人和非吸烟者来使获得的生命年数最大化,即“凡有的,还要加给他”(马太福音25:29)。我们探讨了基于风险或基于时间的分配的实际后果。
我们使用流行病学模型生成半定量情景,比较在荷兰男性人群中分配固定数量的(假设的)预防性心血管药物(“CVStop”)以避免最大死亡人数(基于风险)或挽救最大生命年数(基于时间)的分配效果。随后,我们询问了123名荷兰指南制定者他们更喜欢哪种分配方式。
基于时间和基于风险的分配导致药物在人群中的分布不同。在获得的生命年数和避免的死亡人数的绝对数量以及这些在人群中的分布方面也存在差异。例如,与基于时间的分配相比,基于风险的“CVStop”分配导致对老年人的优先治疗,从而避免了更多的死亡(主要是70岁及以上人群),但获得的生命年数较少。指南制定者认为这种选择困境很困难。在受访者中没有占主导地位的优先选择。
在循证资源分配中,由于疾病风险增加的各种原因,选择节省时间或避免死亡可能会引入道德选择。循证指南的制定不可避免地具有道德影响。