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Barriers to Health Care

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www.CHE.ORG/ETHICS. Goal of Today's conversation. Is there a moral right to health care? If so, ... If it is a social obligation, can people forfeit the claim? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Barriers to Health Care


1
  • Barriers to Health Care
  • Access to Care
  • Philip Boyle, Ph.D.
  • Vice President, Ethics
  • www.CHE.ORG/ETHICS

2
Goal of Todays conversation
  • Is there a moral right to health care?
  • If so, how much do you get?
  • Whose is obligated to provide?
  • What process criteria are there to fairly
    allocate it?

3
History
  • How we got here?
  • The Social Transformation of American Medicine,
    Paul Starr
  • The rise of social insurance in Europe
  • WWII offering benefits
  • Where are we going?
  • Consumer-driven health plans high deductible
    savings account
  • Largely perceived outside our control

4
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5
Case
  • Joe 31-yr-old sentenced felon 14 yrs
  • 1 mil heart transplant
  • Viral infection
  • Frank 41-yr-old CHF
  • Raised 150,000
  • 83,00 on waiting list
  • 5000 die waiting
  • 17,000 get one annually
  • 8,800 donors

6
So what is (are) the moral problem(s)?
  • Identification of moral problem
  • Identification of interests
  • Need facts
  • Values at issue
  • Priority of values
  • Alternatives evaluated in light priorities

7
poll
  • Is healthcare more valuable than other values?
  • Why is healthcare valuable?

8
Why is healthcare a primary value?
  • Purposes of healthcare
  • Relieves pain and suffering
  • Restores functioning
  • Prevents death
  • Improves opportunity for life plan
  • Provides valuable information

9
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10
poll
  • If health care is a primary good, is there any
    obligations in the way we distribute it?

11
HC needs to be distributed equitably?
  • Well being
  • Opportunity
  • Information
  • Interpersonal significance

12
Equitable means?
  • Equality
  • According to benefit or need
  • Adequate level
  • Excessive burdens
  • Acceptable burdens

13
Poll
  • Is it a social obligation?
  • Why?
  • Is a social obligation the same thing as a right?

14
A social obligation?
  • Requires skills and efforts of many
  • Few can plan for it or secure it
  • Illness is largely undeserved unevenly
    distributed
  • Rights
  • Liberty rightsfree of restrictions
  • Entitlement rightsclaim on another

15
poll
  • If it is a social obligation, can people forfeit
    the claim?

16
Does personal responsibility limit access?
  • Difficult to identify
  • Voluntariness difficult to ascribe
  • Institutionalization leads to discrimination
  • Fair share of burden

17
Who is responsible to assure ?
  • Market?
  • People cant plan to afford
  • No all places have markets
  • Lack of information
  • Charity?
  • Government?
  • Subsidiarity
  • Local, state, federal

18
Home health Whats fair?
  • Mr. Brown LSW
  • Client 1-- 4 hours 3X-a-week, niece cares
  • Client 2-- Home worth 10,000-15,000
  • Client 3 85-yr-old cost sharing at 94
  • 15,000 in savings
  • Income 2155 monthly

19
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20
What is adequate?
  • Professional judgment
  • Average current use
  • List of services
  • Overall evaluation

21
Social distribution
  • When there are inadequate resources are there
    reasons to prefer some patients over other
    patients?
  • Severe persistently mentally ill v. those
    persons with mental illness for which we can do
    something
  • Oregon experiment

22
Ethics of Process
  • Organizations are powerful moral agents
  • Transparency
  • Is it clear how the decision is made?
  • Who makes the decision?
  • The criteria that are used
  • Participation
  • Whose interests are considered?
  • Applied evenly and consistently
  • Appeals
  • Checks and balances

23
Ethics of Process
  • Due process
  • Notice what alternatives exist
  • Means of meaningful appeal
  • Consistency in judgment and action
  • Transparency to those affected

24
Criteria
  • What technology is being assessed allocated?
  • New old?
  • All ox being gored?
  • What is the goal of managing the resource?
  • Whose goals?
  • Does it meet the goal?

25
Criteria
  • What measurements are used to assess allocate?
  • Unit of care?
  • Evidence-based
  • Safer
  • Higher quality
  • More efficient
  • It works
  • Effectiveness? Effective for what?
  • Cost-effective

26
Criteria
  • What measurements are used to assess allocate?
  • What costs are relevant?
  • ROI analysis
  • Over what period of time?
  • For a system or society?
  • Non-financial costs

27
Criteria
  • What measurements are used to assess allocate?
  • Social Measures?
  • Holistic care high tech, low touch
  • Preference for those who are poor
  • Quality of life
  • Cost that could reduce access
  • Supports population health
  • Preventive care

28
  • How does the mechanism work?
  • Was there a previous informal mechanism?
  • Who devised when is it used?
  • Is there clarity in definitions consistency in
    application?
  • Unintended consequences of process?

29
Conclusions
  • Establishing why it is a right
  • Rights are inviolable
  • Allocation is a mix of fair process criteria
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