Abstract

Introduction - international experience of rationing (or priority setting). Part 1 How to set priorities: setting priorities - what is holding us back inadequate information or inadequate institutions?. Part 2 Governments and rationing: developments in the Nordic countries goodbye to the simple solutions reactivation of the prioritization process in Finnish health care Israel's basic basket of health services - the importance of being explicitly implicit setting priorities "American style". Part 3 Priorities in developing countries: health priority dilemmas in developing countries public health priorities and the social determinants of ill health. Part 4 Ethical dilemmas: accountability for reasonableness in private and public health insurance tragic choices in health care - lessons from the Child B case fairness as a problem of love and the heart - a clinician's perspective on priority setting the ethics of decentralizing health care priority setting in Canada. Part 5 Techniques for determining priorities: priority setting and health technology assessment - beyond evidence based medicine and cost effectiveness analysis the rationing of surgery - clinical judgement versus priority access scoring. Part 6 Involving the public: public involvement in health care priority setting - are the methods appropriate and valid? rationing health care in New Zealand how the public has a say explicit rationing, deprivation disutility and denial disutility - evidence from a qualitative study. Part 7 Rationing specific treatments: priority setting in practice when sentiments run high - the Di Bella case and others increasing demand for accountability - is there a professional response? conclusion - where are we now?.

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