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Journal ArticleDOI

Setting health care priorities in Oregon. Cost-effectiveness meets the rule of rescue.

David C. Hadorn
- 01 May 1991 - 
- Vol. 265, Iss: 17, pp 2218-2225
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TLDR
Oregon's final priority list was generated without reference to costs and is, therefore, more intuitively sensible than the initial list, but the utility of the final list is limited by its lack of specificity with regard to conditions and treatments.
Abstract
The Oregon Health Services Commission recently completed work on its principal charge: creation of a prioritized list of health care services, ranging from the most important to the least important Oregon's draft priority list was criticized because it seemed to favor minor treatments over lifesaving ones This reaction reflects a fundamental and irreconcilable conflict between cost-effectiveness analysis and the powerful human proclivity to rescue endangered life: the "Rule of Rescue" Oregon's final priority list was generated without reference to costs and is, therefore, more intuitively sensible than the initial list However, the utility of the final list is limited by its lack of specificity with regard to conditions and treatments An alternative approach for setting health care priorities would circumvent the Rule of Rescue by carefully defining necessary indications for treatment Such an approach might be applied to Oregon's final list in order to achieve better specificity ( JAMA 1991;265:2218-2225)

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Foundations of cost-effectiveness analysis for health and medical practices.

Abstract: Limits on health-care resources mandate that resource-allocation decisions be guided by considerations of cost in relation to expected benefits. In cost-effectiveness analysis, the ratio of net health-care costs to net health benefits provides an index by which priorities may be set. Quality-of-life concerns, including both adverse and beneficial effects of therapy, may be incorporated in the calculation of health benefits as adjustments to life expectancy. The timing of future benefits and costs may be accounted for by the appropriate use of discounting. Current decisions must inevitably be based on imperfect information, but sensitivity analysis can increase the level of confidence in some decisions while suggesting areas where further research may be valuable in guiding others. Analyses should be adaptable to the needs of various health-care decision makers, including planners, administrators and providers.
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A general health policy model: update and applications.

TL;DR: It is concluded that many of the advantages of general measures have been overlooked and should be given serious consideration in future studies.
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The use of QALYs in health care decision making.

TL;DR: This paper seeks to highlight some of the critical issues concerning the use of the Quality Adjusted Life Years to measure the outcome of health care choices, in decisions related to both individual patient care and social resource allocation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Preference and Urgency

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe and discuss some problems concerning the way in which criteria of well-being are to be formulated and defended and the ways in which they enter into moral arguments.
Journal ArticleDOI

3. Bentham in a Box: Technology Assessment and Health Care Allocation:

TL;DR: Benton would have been delighted by technology assessment as discussed by the authors and would have used it to plan and effect a rational course of action and to create a rational world, and the great philosopher and social reformer is, of course, still with us in a dessicated form, sitting in his favorite chair, dressed in his own clothes, his waxen face peering out with a bemused smile.
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