Abstract

Priority setting of health interventions is generally considered as a valuable approach to support low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) in their strive for universal health coverage (UHC). However, present initiatives on priority setting are mainly geared towards the development of more cost-effectiveness information, and this evidence does not sufficiently support countries to make optimal choices. The reason is that priority setting is in reality a value-laden political process in which multiple criteria beyond cost-effectiveness are important, and stakeholders often justifiably disagree about the relative importance of these criteria. Here, we propose the use of ‘evidence-informed deliberative processes’ as an approach that does explicitly recognise priority setting as a political process and an intrinsically complex task. In these processes, deliberation between stakeholders is crucial to identify, reflect and learn about the meaning and importance of values, informed by evidence on these values. Such processes then result in the use of a broader range of explicit criteria that can be seen as the product of both international learning (‘core’ criteria, which include eg, cost-effectiveness, priority to the worse off, and financial protection) and learning among local stakeholders (‘contextual’ criteria). We believe that, with these evidence-informed deliberative processes in place, priority setting can provide a more meaningful contribution to achieving UHC.

Highlights

  • In January 2016, the Prince Mahidol Award Conference (PMAC) in Thailand brought together more than 900 delegates from 60 different countries, to discuss priority setting of health interventions to achieve universal health coverage (UHC).[1]

  • The reason is that priority setting is in reality a value-laden political process, in which multiple criteria beyond cost-effectiveness are important and stakeholders often justifiably disagree about their relative importance

  • We propose the use of ‘evidence-informed deliberative processes’ as an approach that does explicitly recognise priority setting as a political process and an intrinsically complex task

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Summary

Introduction

In January 2016, the Prince Mahidol Award Conference (PMAC) in Thailand brought together more than 900 delegates from 60 different countries, to discuss priority setting of health interventions to achieve universal health coverage (UHC).[1]. We first outline the need for evidence-informed deliberative processes, illustrate this with examples from Indonesia, Thailand, and the Netherlands, discuss how to preserve the use of social core values in these processes, and elaborate on their use to achieve UHC.

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