Necessity under construction: societal weighing rationality in the appraisal of health care technologies

Publication date

2021-10

Authors

Kleinhout - Vliek, TinekeISNI 0000000492898582
de Bont, Antoinette
Boer, Bert

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Health care coverage decisions may employ many different considerations, which are brought together across two phases. The assessment phase examines the available scientific evidence, such as the cost-effectiveness, of the technology. The appraisal then contextualises this evidence to arrive at an (advised) coverage decision, but little is known about how this is done. In the Netherlands, the appraisal is set up to achieve a societal weighing and is the primary place where need- and solidarity-related (‘necessity’) argumentations are used. To elucidate how the Dutch appraisal committee ‘constructs necessity’, we analysed observations and recordings of two appraisal committee meetings at the National Health Care Institute, the corresponding documents (five), and interviews with committee members and policy makers (13 interviewees in 12 interviews), with attention to specific necessity argumentations. The Dutch appraisal committee constructs necessity in four phases: (1) allowing explicit criteria to steer the process; (2) allowing patient (representative) contributions to challenge the process; (3) bringing new argumentations in from outside and weaving them together; and (4) formulating recommendations to societal stakeholders. We argue that in these ways, the appraisal committee achieves societal weighing rationality, as the committee actively uses argumentations from society and embeds the decision outcome in society.

Keywords

deliberative decision-making, health care decision-making, necessary health care, priority setting, societal weighing

Citation

Vliek, T H, de Bont, A & Boer, B 2021, 'Necessity under construction : societal weighing rationality in the appraisal of health care technologies', Health Economics, Policy and Law, vol. 16, no. 4, pp. 457-472. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1744133120000341