Blumstein J F
Vanderbilt Law School, Vanderbilt Institute for Public Policy Studies, Nashville, TN 37240, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 1997 Aug;45(4):545-54. doi: 10.1016/s0277-9536(96)00395-4.
The state of Oregon decided to cover all potentially eligible Medicaid citizens to 100% of poverty. Previously, Oregon had covered persons up to 67% of poverty. In order to keep overall program costs in check. Oregon decided to limit the number of services that its Medicaid program would cover. Oregon's normative choice was to contain program costs by covering all eligible persons up to 100% of poverty, while at the same time uniformly limiting access to certain services for everyone in the overall group of eligible persons. The state developed a prioritization list of medical services and priced the components on the list. The amount of money ultimately available for the Medicaid program was a political decision informed by data about the cost of different services and influenced by the priorities set through an independent process of priority-setting. Physicians were asked to determine what works medically, how well it works, and what benefits accrue to patients. Recognizing that physician perspectives on efficacy might vary from patients' perspectives on valuation of benefits, Oregon's planners developed a method for valuing medical outcomes that stemmed from particular medical interventions. This blend of medical fact and value to patients allowed for comparing valuations by introducing cost considerations. Condition-treatment (CT) pairs linked a medical condition with one or more courses of treatment. The goal was to determine the likely incremental medical benefit from a given treatment. In addition, Oregon developed a Quality-of-Well-Being scale to determine the net patient benefit from medical intervention and used a telephone survey to value that net benefit. A cost-benefit ratio was derived, and a prioritization of CT pairs was developed. The article analyzes and evaluates Oregon's use of cost-benefit calculations in the allocation of Medicaid funds, noting that Oregon itself backed away from many of the implications of its cost-benefit analysis and that the Americans with Disabilities Act has constrained use of quality-of-life judgments in Medicaid resource allocation decision-making.
俄勒冈州决定为所有符合条件的医疗补助公民提供高达100%贫困线标准的补助。此前,俄勒冈州只为贫困线67%以下的人群提供补助。为了控制整体项目成本,俄勒冈州决定限制其医疗补助项目涵盖的服务数量。俄勒冈州的规范性选择是,通过为所有符合条件的人群提供高达100%贫困线标准的补助来控制项目成本,同时统一限制整个符合条件人群中每个人获得某些服务的机会。该州制定了一份医疗服务优先级列表,并对列表中的项目进行定价。最终可用于医疗补助项目的资金数额是一项政治决策,它依据不同服务成本的数据,并受到通过独立的优先级设定过程所确定的优先级的影响。医生被要求确定哪些治疗方法在医学上有效、效果如何以及能给患者带来哪些益处。认识到医生对疗效的看法可能与患者对益处评估的看法不同,俄勒冈州的规划者开发了一种方法来评估源于特定医疗干预的医疗结果。这种将医学事实与对患者的价值相结合的方式,通过引入成本考量因素,实现了对价值评估的比较。病症 - 治疗(CT)组合将一种病症与一个或多个治疗疗程联系起来。目标是确定特定治疗可能带来的增量医疗益处。此外,俄勒冈州制定了一份幸福感量表,以确定医疗干预给患者带来的净益处,并通过电话调查对该净益处进行评估。由此得出成本效益比,并制定了CT组合的优先级。本文分析并评估了俄勒冈州在医疗补助资金分配中使用成本效益计算的情况,指出俄勒冈州本身回避了其成本效益分析的许多影响,并且《美国残疾人法案》限制了在医疗补助资源分配决策中使用生活质量判断。