Around the Tables - Contextual Factors in Healthcare Coverage Decisions Across Western Europe.
Tineke Kleinhout-VliekAntoinette A de BontMeindert BoysenMatthias PerlethRomke van der VeenJacqueline ZwaapBert BoerPublished in: International journal of health policy and management (2020)
First, we conclude that in these countries, contextual factors are actively integrated in the decision document, and that this is achieved in deliberation. Conceptualising contextual factors as both situation-specific and actively-integrated affords insight into practices of contextualisation and provides an encouragement for exchange between decision-makers on more qualitative aspects of decisions. Second, the decisions that lacked a publicly accessible justification of the final decision document raised questions on the decisions' legitimacy. Further research could address patterning of contextual factors, elucidate why some factors may remain implicit, and how decisions without a publicly available decision document may enable or restrain decision-making practice.