Sandman Lars, Liliemark Jan, Gustavsson Erik, Henriksson Martin
Centre for Assessment of Medical Technology, Department of Health, Medicine and Caring Sciences, 58183, Linköping, Sweden.
Division of Philosophy and Applied Ethics, Department of Culture and Society and Department of Health, Medicine and Caring Sciences, National Centre for Priorities in Health, Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden.
Med Health Care Philos. 2024 Sep;27(3):349-357. doi: 10.1007/s11019-024-10208-9. Epub 2024 Jun 1.
When considering the introduction of a new intervention in a budget constrained healthcare system, priority setting based on fair principles is fundamental. In many jurisdictions, a multi-criteria approach with several different considerations is employed, including severity and cost-effectiveness. Such multi-criteria approaches raise questions about how to balance different considerations against each other, and how to understand the logical or normative relations between them. For example, some jurisdictions make explicit reference to a large patient benefit as such a consideration. However, since patient benefit is part of a cost-effectiveness assessment it is not clear how to balance considerations of greater patient benefit against considerations of severity and cost-effectiveness. The aim of this paper is to explore the role of a large patient benefit as an independent criterion for priority setting in a healthcare system also considering severity and cost-effectiveness. By taking the opportunity cost of new interventions (i.e., the health forgone in patients already receiving treatment) into account, we argue that patient benefit has a complex relationship to priority setting. More specifically, it cannot be reasonably concluded that large patient benefits should be given priority if severity, cost-effectiveness, and opportunity costs are held constant. Since we cannot find general support for taking patient benefit into account as an independent criterion from any of the most discussed theories about distributive justice: utilitarianism, prioritarianism, telic egalitarianism and sufficientarianism, it is reasonable to avoid doing so. Hence, given the complexity of the role of patient benefit, we conclude that in priority practice, a large patient benefit should not be considered as an independent criterion, on top of considerations of severity and cost-effectiveness.
在预算有限的医疗体系中考虑引入新的干预措施时,基于公平原则进行优先排序至关重要。在许多司法管辖区,采用了包含多种不同考量因素的多标准方法,包括疾病严重程度和成本效益。这种多标准方法引发了关于如何平衡不同考量因素以及如何理解它们之间的逻辑或规范关系的问题。例如,一些司法管辖区明确将给患者带来巨大益处作为一项考量因素。然而,由于患者益处是成本效益评估的一部分,所以尚不清楚如何在更大的患者益处考量与疾病严重程度和成本效益考量之间取得平衡。本文的目的是探讨在同时考虑疾病严重程度和成本效益的医疗体系中,将给患者带来巨大益处作为优先排序的独立标准所发挥的作用。通过考虑新干预措施的机会成本(即已经接受治疗的患者所放弃的健康),我们认为患者益处与优先排序之间存在复杂的关系。更具体地说,如果疾病严重程度、成本效益和机会成本保持不变,不能合理地得出应优先考虑给患者带来巨大益处的结论。由于我们无法从任何关于分配正义的最受讨论的理论(功利主义、优先主义、目的论平等主义和充足主义)中找到将患者益处作为独立标准考虑的普遍支持,所以避免这样做是合理的。因此,鉴于患者益处作用的复杂性,我们得出结论,在优先排序实践中,除了疾病严重程度和成本效益的考量之外,不应将给患者带来巨大益处视为独立标准。