Rationing Health Care. Hard choices and unavoidable trade-offs.
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Auteur(s): A. den Exter, M. Buijsen (eds.) ISBN: 9789046605257 One of the most controversial issues in many health care systems is health care rationing. In essence, rationing refers to the denial of - or delay in - access to scarce goods and services in health care, despite the existence of medical need. Scarcity of financial and medical resources confronts society with painful questions. Who should decide which medicine or new treatment will be covered by social security and on which criteria such decisions must be based? Can age, for example, be justified as a selection criterion? Should decision-making be left to health care policymakers, hospital administrators, or rather, to treating physicians (‘bedside rationing’)? Is there a role for individual patients? These are difficult questions that suggest the need for transparent and democratic decision-making. In reality, however, the rationing debate occurs in a sub rosa world, based on imperfect information, distorted interpretations of effectiveness, and hidden cost concerns. ‘Rationing Health Care. Hard Choices and Unavoidable Tradeoffs’ explores these and other questions from various perspectives (medicine, philosophy, ethics, economics and law) . Each of the authors’ contributions analyses the debate from a different angle in search of fair and just rationing decisions. Over de auteur(s): André den Exter and Martin Buijsen are both academics affiliated with Erasmus University Rotterdam, the Netherlands and founders of the Erasmus Observatory on Health Law.