Khor Sara, Elsisi Zizi A, Carlson Josh J
The Comparative Health Outcomes, Policy, and Economics (CHOICE) Institute, School of Pharmacy, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
The Comparative Health Outcomes, Policy, and Economics (CHOICE) Institute, School of Pharmacy, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Value Health. 2023 Mar;26(3):418-426. doi: 10.1016/j.jval.2022.08.009. Epub 2022 Oct 8.
This systematic review aims to summarize and qualitatively assess published evaluations on the US public's preferences for health equity and their willingness to trade-off efficiency for equity.
Following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses literature search extension guidelines, we searched MEDLINE and Embase for relevant peer-reviewed publications on this topic before February 2021. We included English-language articles that solicited US preferences regarding efficiency-equity trade-offs and prioritizing healthcare resources based on socioeconomic status, race, disability, or burden of disease. Quantitative and qualitative data captured were decided a priori and iteratively adapted as themes emerged.
Fourteen studies were found over a 25-year span. Only 4 focused on resource allocation across social groups. Three distinct notions of fairness were studied: equal distribution of resources, priority to the worse-off, and equal health achieved. We found modest support for equal distribution of resources and willingness to sacrifice efficiency for equity in the United States. Prioritizing the underserved was relatively less studied and received less support and was more preferred when resources were scarce, when allocating resources between social groups, or when participants were informed about the fundamental origins of health inequities. Equal health was the least studied, but received nontrivial support.
The existing literature evaluating the US public's understanding and preferences toward equity was severely limited by the lack of rigorous quantitative studies and heterogeneous attribute selection and fairness definitions. High-quality studies that clearly define fairness, focus on social groups, and apply rigorous methods to quantify equity preferences are needed to integrate the public's value on equity into healthcare decisions.
本系统评价旨在总结和定性评估已发表的关于美国公众对健康公平的偏好以及他们为实现公平而牺牲效率的意愿的评价。
遵循系统评价与Meta分析的首选报告项目文献检索扩展指南,我们在2021年2月之前检索了MEDLINE和Embase,以查找有关该主题的相关同行评审出版物。我们纳入了征求美国公众对效率-公平权衡以及基于社会经济地位、种族、残疾或疾病负担对医疗资源进行优先排序的偏好的英文文章。预先确定了要收集的定量和定性数据,并根据出现的主题进行了反复调整。
在25年的时间跨度内共找到14项研究。只有4项研究关注不同社会群体间的资源分配。研究了三种不同的公平概念:资源的平等分配、优先照顾弱势群体以及实现平等的健康水平。我们发现美国对资源平等分配以及为实现公平而牺牲效率的做法有一定程度的支持。对优先服务未得到充分服务的人群的研究相对较少,获得的支持也较少,而在资源稀缺时、在不同社会群体间分配资源时或当参与者了解到健康不平等的根本原因时,这种做法更受青睐。实现平等的健康水平是研究最少的,但也获得了相当的支持。
现有评估美国公众对公平的理解和偏好的文献受到严重限制,缺乏严格的定量研究以及属性选择和公平定义的异质性。需要高质量的研究,明确界定公平,关注社会群体,并应用严格的方法来量化公平偏好,以便将公众对公平的价值观纳入医疗决策。