为昂贵的癌症治疗提供公共资金:综合“3e”——证据、经济和伦理。

Jeffrey Kirby, Emily Somers, Christy Simpson, Judy McPhee
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在过去五年中,新的癌症疗法和药物的成本急剧上升,有些令人担忧。在那些医疗保健系统(主要)由公共资助的发达国家,这引起了必须就资金问题做出决策的政府管理者和政治家的合理担忧。在加拿大,各省卫生部门的任务是利用每年作为省政府总体预算程序一部分确定的"固定资金"向所有公民提供全面的卫生保健服务。近年来,越来越多的医疗保健决策者认识到,批准为多种新的昂贵的癌症治疗提供资金,正在为满足省级公民的其他合法医疗保健需求创造“机会成本”。针对这一现实,加拿大新斯科舍省卫生部于2005年成立了癌症全身治疗政策委员会(CSTPC)。该委员会的任务是向新斯科舍省卫生部副部长提出关于为新的癌症疗法提供公共资金的建议。该委员会与达尔豪斯大学生物伦理学系的顾问合作,制定了一个全面而包容的决策框架,以促进和促进决策制定,该决策制定明确依据证据、经济学和伦理学——“3e”——来达成和提出建议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The public funding of expensive cancer therapies: synthesizing the "3Es"--evidence, economics, and ethics.

The cost of new cancer therapies and drugs has risen sharply and somewhat alarmingly in the last five years. In those developed countries where healthcare systems are (primarily) publicly funded, this has caused legitimate concern among government administrators and politicians who must make decisions regarding funding. In the Canadian context, provincial Departments of Health are mandated to provide comprehensive healthcare services to all citizens out of a "fixed pot" of financial resources, which is determined annually as part of the provincial government's overall budget process. In recent years there has been increasing recognition among healthcare decision makers that the approval of funding for multiple new expensive cancer treatments is creating an "opportunity cost" for meeting the other legitimate healthcare needs of provincial citizens. In response to this reality, the Department of Health of the Canadian province of Nova Scotia created a Cancer Systemic Therapy Policy Committee (CSTPC) in 2005. The mandate of this committee is to make recommendations to the Nova Scotia Deputy Minister of Health regarding the public funding of new cancer therapies. In collaboration with consultants from the Dalhousie University Department of Bioethics, the committee developed a comprehensive and inclusive decision-making framework to promote and facilitate decision making that is explicitly informed by evidence, economics, and ethics--the "3Es"--in reaching and making recommendations.

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