Literature DB >> 12701950

The great escape? Prospects for regulating access to technology through health technology assessment.

Mira Johri1, Pascale Lehoux.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Health technology assessment (HTA) can be used both to promote access to safe, efficacious, and cost-effective technologies, and to discourage access to undesirable ones. Yet HTA has had less success than might be hoped in pursuing the latter goal. This paper examines the scope of HTA as currently practiced to contribute to regulation of access to undesirable technologies.
DESIGN: The study design is a critical analysis of HTA's methods, based on an exposition of the normative issues involved in restriction of access to health technologies. The paper classifies technologies that might figure as potential candidates for exclusion into five categories and underscores the key social and ethical dilemmas associated with limiting their use.
RESULTS: For four of the five categories of technology outlined, limitation of access necessarily involves denial of benefit. Limitation of access thus inevitably raises difficult normative issues. We show that these are ill-addressed by the range of "evidence" typically considered in technology assessments, which centers predominantly on clinical and technical features such as efficacy, safety, and costs.
CONCLUSIONS: If HTA is to enhance our ability to make reasonable decisions concerning the use and diffusion of health technologies, it must better integrate consideration of the social, political, and ethical dimensions of health technologies into the process of technology assessment. We suggest a framework within which to approach this goal.

Keywords:  Health Care and Public Health

Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 12701950     DOI: 10.1017/s0266462303000175

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Technol Assess Health Care        ISSN: 0266-4623            Impact factor:   2.188


  6 in total

1.  [Expensive drugs and intergenerational justice].

Authors:  David Hughes
Journal:  Can J Public Health       Date:  2010 May-Jun

2.  Ethical, legal, and social issues in health technology assessment for prenatal/preconceptional and newborn screening: a workshop report.

Authors:  B K Potter; D Avard; V Entwistle; C Kennedy; P Chakraborty; M McGuire; B J Wilson
Journal:  Public Health Genomics       Date:  2008-09-03       Impact factor: 2.000

3.  Why examining the desirability of health technology matters.

Authors:  Pascale Lehoux
Journal:  Healthc Policy       Date:  2008-02

4.  Engaging the public in priority-setting for health technology assessment: findings from a citizens' jury.

Authors:  Devidas Menon; Tania Stafinski
Journal:  Health Expect       Date:  2008-09       Impact factor: 3.377

5.  A six-minute video-clip to ponder the values fostered by health technology.

Authors:  Pascale Lehoux; Bryn Williams-Jones; Myriam Hivon; Genevieve Daudelin; Fiona Alice Miller
Journal:  Australas Med J       Date:  2012-10-31

6.  Bridging health technology assessment (HTA) with multicriteria decision analyses (MCDA): field testing of the EVIDEM framework for coverage decisions by a public payer in Canada.

Authors:  Michèle Tony; Monika Wagner; Hanane Khoury; Donna Rindress; Tina Papastavros; Paul Oh; Mireille M Goetghebeur
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2011-11-30       Impact factor: 2.655

  6 in total

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