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Pricing Life: Why It's Time for Health Care Rationing (Basic Bioethics)
 
 
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Pricing Life: Why It's Time for Health Care Rationing (Basic Bioethics) [Hardcover]

Dr Peter A. Ubel (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

0262210169 978-0262210164 November 12, 1999 1
Although managed health care is a hot topic, too few discussions focus on health care rationing—who lives and who dies, death versus dollars. In this book physician and bioethicist Peter A. Ubel argues that physicians, health insurance companies, managed care organizations, and governments need to consider the cost-effectiveness of many new health care technologies. In particular, they need to think about how best to ration health care. Ubel believes that standard medical training should provide physicians with the expertise to decide when to withhold health care from patients. He discusses the moral questions raised by this position, and by health care rationing in general. He incorporates ethical arguments about the appropriate role of cost-effectiveness analysis in health care rationing, empirical research about how the general public wants to ration care, and clinical insights based on his practice of general internal medicine. Straddling the fields of ethics, economics, research psychology, and clinical medicine, he moves the debate forward from whether to ration to how to ration. The discussion is enlivened by actual case studies.

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Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

Ubel (medicine and bioethics, Univ. of Pennsylvania) presents an overview of the moral and methodological conundrums raised by cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA), especially with regard to its role as a guide for how to ration healthcare. Ubel hopes that by viewing health rationing through the CEA lens, politicians, the public, and healthcare providers will be forced to open a debate on which services ought to be offered to everyone regardless of ability to pay and which should be offered according to ability to pay. Managed care, the political, stalemate surrounding healthcare delivery, and economic realities combine to make CEA a reasonable approach to healthcare rationing. Ubel is a persuasive advocate or CEA, seeing it as a powerful tool to help society set its healthcare delivery priorities. Recommended for bioethics and larger health collections.
James Swanton, Harlem Hosp. Lib., New York
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From The New England Journal of Medicine

Reviewed by Wallace F. Berman, M.D.
Copyright © 2000 Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved. The New England Journal of Medicine is a registered trademark of the MMS.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 264 pages
  • Publisher: The MIT Press; 1 edition (November 12, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0262210169
  • ISBN-13: 978-0262210164
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.2 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,311,177 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Solid Analysis of Issues Related to Health Care Rationing, June 10, 2000
By 
R. Albin (Ann Arbor, Michigan United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Pricing Life: Why It's Time for Health Care Rationing (Basic Bioethics) (Hardcover)
Modern medicine is one of the great successes of industrial civilization. This remarkable progress, however, has come at a very high price. In the USA, for example, we spend close to 15% of our GNP on health care. We are the champion health care spendthrift of developed world but other industrialized countries spend huge amounts on health care. It is not surprising that huge pressures are exerted to hold down costs; HMO management in the USA, waiting lists for complex procedures in many countries; restricted access to specialists in Great Britain. All of these cost containment involve rationing of health care services. It is a surprise, then, that this good book is one of the few to explicitly address rationing of health care. Dr. Ubel makes a series of cogent, indeed, commonsense points. Rationing is common. Rationing is inevitable in any system without infinite resources. Physicians, even those who believe that they are not rationing health care, either practice rationing at the bedside and are enmeshed in systems that make rationing decisions. Ubel decries properly the existence of this type of implicit rationing and argues instead that since rationing is inevitable, physicians should participate in explicit and rational efforts to ration care. This leads Ubel to a series of interesting recommendations. One is that physicians are in the best position to make certain kinds of rationing decisions, "bedside rationing', because they can individualize care and are best able to attempt to reconcile the needs of patients with the existence of limited resources. Ubel is an advocate of a certain type of utilitarian analysis, cost effective analysis (CEA), as a tool for deciding the value of tests and interventions. He exposes the limitations of CEA carefully and suggests ways in which it might be improved in order to become a useful tool. I think this book is primarily aimed at academic physicians with the hope of influencing physician education and approach to this kind of difficult problem. In this respect, this is a successful effort.

There are several problems with the book. As Ubel acknowledges, it is not a rigorous or systematic book, but more polemical in spirit. There is definitely a need for a major systematic work(s) on this topic. Another problem is Ubel's recommendation of CEA. He is very clear about the limitations of this method but he recommends it because he views it as flexible enough to incorporate societal preferences. Even if this were methodologically possible, I doubt this would work in the USA. In relatively homogeneous and consensus oriented countries like Sweden or Japan, this approach would have real value. It has, however, been a long time since Americans reached consensus on many, many fundamental issues related to values, and this situation is unlikely to change. Finally, Ubel does not go far enough. Given resource limitations, methods like CEA,which help make choices among tests and interventions, will not address the really tough issues regarding who should receive care and how much is appropriate. These are horribly difficult problems but must be faced squarely.

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2 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Important information, May 22, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Pricing Life: Why It's Time for Health Care Rationing (Basic Bioethics) (Hardcover)
Dr. Peter Ubel has written and important and useful book. He describes very clearly how medical care in the U.S. is already being rationed--even though we might not call it 'rationing,' or even realize it. He gives clear examples of how that process is being taken place; the arguments for and against it; and a very coherent argument that medical rationing will continue, and grow, because it is economically inevitable.

This book is important because it tells the reader that rationing will take place--with or without an informed patient role. It is up to those who receive medical care to understand what's at stake to make sure they do play an active part in the decision-making process.

The book is very clearly written, but more examples, particularly in the latter part of the book, would make is more readable.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
It may have started out with a touch of fatigue, but soon it was clear that something was dramatically wrong with Coby Howard. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
rationing preferences, absolutely scarce resource, bedside rationing, less effective test, advocacy duties, better prognostic group, ration health care, health maximization, specific health care services, many health care services, rationing choices, best medical interests, utility elicitations, ration medical care, rationing decisions, health care priorities, colon cancer screening, antigen matching, scarce health care resources, discretionary services, rationing plan, formulary committees, beneficial services, value people place, utility measurement
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, Oregon's Medicaid, Coby Howard, Explicit Non-explicit Necessary Beneficial Figure, The Future of Cost-Effectiveness Analysis, Social Security, Disabilities Act, Oregon Health Services Commission
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