Department of Pharmaceutical Health Services Research, University of Maryland, 220 N. Arch St, 12th Floor, Baltimore, MD, 21201, USA.
Pharmacoeconomics. 2021 Dec;39(12):1365-1372. doi: 10.1007/s40273-021-01075-w. Epub 2021 Aug 30.
The compounding effects of occupying two or more social identities, such as being "Black" and "female" have been described in intersectionality theory. Intersectionality, a term coined by legal scholar and activist Kimberlé Crenshaw, is a framework to consider race and other social identities as overlapping, dynamic, and interdependent identities. Since its inception, intersectionality has made significant in-roads to inform the conceptualization and empirical investigations of race, gender, and other social identities in sociology, critical race theory, anthropology, feminist theory, and other disciplines. However, to date, cost effectiveness research has not systematically examined race intersecting with other social identities in the valuation of medicines using social theory, such as intersectionality. Consequently, cost effectiveness analysis, which is a method to study the value of medicines in diverse populations, has not been subject to sufficient examination through an intersectionality framework. In the US context, the racial injustices experienced and documented within diverse communities highlight that health outcomes cannot be examined in a vacuum; overlapping social identities such as race and class in relation to context have real effects on health behaviors, measured preferences, and economic costs. Failure to examine the effects of overlapping social identities on heterogeneity in benefits and costs can result in inadequate information for decision makers to evaluate the value of treatments. Without consideration of the overlapping social identities in diverse populations, there is a risk that cost effectiveness analysis results will not accurately reflect the value of treatments in socially disadvantaged populations. In this Current Opinion, we provide an outline for conducting socially conscious cost effectiveness analyses, using intersectionality as one example.
占据两个或多个社会身份的复合效应,例如“黑人”和“女性”,在交叉性理论中有所描述。交叉性是由法律学者和活动家金伯利·克伦肖创造的一个术语,它是一个考虑种族和其他社会身份重叠、动态和相互依存的框架。自成立以来,交叉性在社会学、批判种族理论、人类学、女性主义理论和其他学科中,为种族、性别和其他社会身份的概念化和实证研究做出了重大贡献。然而,迄今为止,成本效益研究尚未系统地利用社会理论(如交叉性)来研究种族与其他社会身份在药品评估中的相互作用。因此,成本效益分析是一种研究不同人群中药品价值的方法,尚未通过交叉性框架进行充分的检验。在美国背景下,不同社区中经历和记录的种族不公正现象表明,健康结果不能孤立地进行检查;与背景相关的种族和阶级等重叠社会身份对健康行为、衡量偏好和经济成本有实际影响。不检查重叠社会身份对效益和成本异质性的影响,可能会导致决策者评估治疗价值的信息不足。如果不考虑不同人群中的重叠社会身份,那么成本效益分析结果就有可能无法准确反映治疗方法在社会弱势群体中的价值。在本现况观点中,我们提供了一个使用交叉性作为一个例子进行具有社会意识的成本效益分析的大纲。