Evaluation as institution: a contractarian argument for needs-based economic evaluation

BMC Med Ethics. 2018 Jun 13;19(1):59. doi: 10.1186/s12910-018-0294-1.

Abstract

Background: There is a gap between health economic evaluation methods and the value judgments of coverage decision makers, at least in Germany. Measuring preference satisfaction has been claimed to be inappropriate for allocating health care resources, e.g. because it disregards medical need. The existing methods oriented at medical need have been claimed to disregard non-consequentialist fairness concerns. The aim of this article is to propose a new, contractarian argument for justifying needs-based economic evaluation. It is based on consent rather than maximization of some impersonal unit of value to accommodate the fairness concerns.

Main text: This conceptual paper draws upon contractarian ethics and constitution economics to show how economic evaluation can be viewed as an institution to overcome societal conflicts in the allocation of scarce health care resources. For this, the problem of allocating scarce health care resources in a society is reconstructed as a social dilemma. Both disadvantaged patients and affluent healthy individuals can be argued to share interests in a societal contract to provide technologies which ameliorate medical need, based on progressive funding. The use of needs-based economic evaluation methods for coverage determination can be interpreted as institutions for conflict resolution as far as they use consented criteria to ensure the social contract's sustainability and avoid implicit rationing or unaffordable contribution rates. This justifies the use of needs-based evaluation methods by Pareto-superiority and consent (rather than by some needs-based value function per se).

Conclusion: The view of economic evaluation presented here may help account for fairness concerns in the further development of evaluation methods. This is because it directs the attention away from determining some unit of value to be maximized towards determining those persons who are most likely not to consent and meeting their concerns. Following this direction in methods development is likely to increase the acceptability of health economic evaluation by decision makers.

Keywords: Constitution economics; Contractarianism; Contractualism; Ethical contract theory; Ethics of health economic evaluation; Normative economics.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Contracts
  • Cost-Benefit Analysis / methods*
  • Decision Making
  • Delivery of Health Care / ethics*
  • Dissent and Disputes
  • Ethical Analysis*
  • Ethical Theory
  • Germany
  • Health Care Rationing / economics
  • Health Care Rationing / ethics*
  • Health Equity
  • Health Resources
  • Health Services Needs and Demand
  • Humans
  • Insurance, Health*
  • Judgment
  • Poverty
  • Social Class
  • Social Justice*
  • Social Values*
  • Technology
  • Vulnerable Populations