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Cost-Effectiveness and the Avoidance of Discrimination in Healthcare: Can We Have Both?

Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen
Published in: Cambridge quarterly of healthcare ethics : CQ : the international journal of healthcare ethics committees (2022)
Many ethical theorists believe that a given distribution of healthcare is morally justified only if (1) it is cost-effective and (2) it does not discriminate against older adults and disabled people. However, if (3) cost-effectiveness involves maximizing the number of quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) added by a given unit of healthcare resource, or cost, it seems the pursuit of cost-effectiveness will inevitably discriminate against older adults and disabled patients. I show why this trilemma is harder to escape than some theorists think. We cannot avoid it by using age- or disability-weighted QALY scores, for example. I then explain why there is no sense of "discrimination" on which discrimination is both unjust, and thus something healthcare rationing must avoid, and something cost-effective healthcare rationing inevitably involves. I go on to argue that many of the reasons we have for not favoring rationing that maximizes QALYs outside the healthcare context apply in healthcare as well. Thus, claim (1) above is dubious.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • ejection fraction
  • physical activity
  • newly diagnosed
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • computed tomography
  • health information
  • social media
  • affordable care act