Expanded HTA: Enhancing Fairness and Legitimacy

Document Type : Editorial

Authors

1 Department of Global Health and Population, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA

2 Interfaculty Initiative in Health Policy, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA

Abstract

All societies face the need to make judgments about what interventions (both public health and personal medical) to provide to their populations under reasonable resource constraints. Their decisions should be informed by good evidence and arguments from health technology assessment (HTA). But if HTA restricts itself to evaluations of safety, efficacy, and cost-effectiveness, it risks being viewed as insufficient to guide health decision-makers; if it addresses other issues, such as budget impact, equity, and financial protection, it may be accused of overreaching. But the risk of overreaching can be reduced by embedding HTA in a fair, deliberative process that meets the conditions required by accountability for reasonableness.

Highlights

Commentaries Published on this Paper

  • Beyond the Black Box Approach to Ethics!; Comment on “Expanded HTA: Enhancing Fairness and Legitimacy”

          Abstract | PDF

  • HTA – Algorithm or Process?; Comment on “Expanded HTA: Enhancing Fairness and Legitimacy”

          Abstract | PDF

  • Expanded HTA, Legitimacy and Independence; Comment on “Expanded HTA: Enhancing Fairness and Legitimacy”

          Abstract | PDF

  • Fair Processes for Priority Setting: Putting Theory into Practice; Comment on “Expanded HTA: Enhancing Fairness and Legitimacy”

          Abstract | PDF

  • The Need for Global Application of the Accountability for Reasonableness Approach to Support Sustainable Outcomes; Comment on “Expanded HTA: Enhancing Fairness and Legitimacy”

          Abstract | PDF

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Main Subjects


* The authors would like to correct the name of the third author in this paper to Julian Urrutia.

** The Correction of this article was published in Int J Health Policy Manag. 2016;5(5):347

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