Ethical considerations relating to healthcare resource allocation decisions
Author(s)
Olver, Ian
Dodds, Susan
Kenner, Jeremy
Kerridge, Ian
McGovern, Kevin
Milligan, Eleanor
Mortimer, Robin
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2019
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Public policy decisions about patients' access to limited healthcare resources must be defensible and responsive to the interests of those affected. Decision‐makers should articulate their reasoning and recommendations so that citizens can judge them. While the context of policy decisions will differ, their legitimacy depends upon the transparency of the reasoning, the accountability of the decision‐makers, the testability of the evidence used to inform the decision‐making and the inclusive recognition of those the decision affects. An example of applying this framework to resource allocation is that of approving effective ...
View more >Public policy decisions about patients' access to limited healthcare resources must be defensible and responsive to the interests of those affected. Decision‐makers should articulate their reasoning and recommendations so that citizens can judge them. While the context of policy decisions will differ, their legitimacy depends upon the transparency of the reasoning, the accountability of the decision‐makers, the testability of the evidence used to inform the decision‐making and the inclusive recognition of those the decision affects. An example of applying this framework to resource allocation is that of approving effective high‐cost anticancer drugs in a timely fashion.
View less >
View more >Public policy decisions about patients' access to limited healthcare resources must be defensible and responsive to the interests of those affected. Decision‐makers should articulate their reasoning and recommendations so that citizens can judge them. While the context of policy decisions will differ, their legitimacy depends upon the transparency of the reasoning, the accountability of the decision‐makers, the testability of the evidence used to inform the decision‐making and the inclusive recognition of those the decision affects. An example of applying this framework to resource allocation is that of approving effective high‐cost anticancer drugs in a timely fashion.
View less >
Journal Title
Internal Medicine Journal
Volume
49
Issue
11
Subject
Cardiovascular medicine and haematology
Clinical sciences
Health services and systems
Public health
Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Medicine, General & Internal
General & Internal Medicine
resource allocation