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Related Concept Videos

Nursing Clinical Information System01:27

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Nursing Clinical Information System (NCIS)
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International Nursing Organizations I01:23

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There are various healthcare agencies in the United States—some of which are managed by religious institutions and others by different government branches.
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Using Visual and Narrative Methods to Achieve Fair Process in Clinical Care
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Justice and the NICE approach.

Richard Cookson

    Journal of Medical Ethics
    |December 18, 2014
    PubMed
    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    Healthcare priority setting requires balancing cost-effectiveness, non-discrimination, and prioritizing the worse off. Ethical decisions must consider both identified beneficiaries and unidentified patients facing opportunity costs.

    Keywords:
    Allocation of Health Care ResourcesDistributive JusticeEthicsHealth Care Economics

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    Area of Science:

    • Medical Ethics
    • Health Economics
    • Public Health Policy

    Background:

    • Population-level healthcare priority setting is crucial for resource allocation.
    • Decisions by bodies like the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence impact public health.
    • Ethical frameworks guide these complex decisions.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To outline key ethical principles for healthcare priority setting.
    • To emphasize the importance of health justice in resource allocation.
    • To highlight the consideration of both direct beneficiaries and those incurring opportunity costs.

    Main Methods:

    • Analysis of ethical principles in healthcare priority setting.
    • Examination of cost-effectiveness, non-discrimination, and prioritizing the worse off.
    • Consideration of identified and unidentified patient groups.

    Main Results:

    • Three core principles of health justice are identified: cost-effectiveness, non-discrimination, and prioritizing the worse off.
    • Ethical decision-making necessitates evaluating benefits for identified patients.
    • Opportunity costs borne by unidentified patients must be acknowledged.

    Conclusions:

    • Effective healthcare priority setting integrates principles of health justice.
    • Ethical frameworks must account for all affected populations, not just direct recipients of care.
    • Balancing competing ethical considerations is essential for equitable resource distribution.