The Allocation of Health Care Resources: An Ethical Evaluation of the ‘‘QALY’’ Approach [Book Review]

Ethics 110 (3):627-628 (2000)
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Abstract

This book contains a sustained defense of the Quality Adjusted Life Years (QALY) approach to resource allocation in health care. According to this approach resources should be allocated in such a way that the number of QALYs gained is maximized. The authors place this approach within a broader preference Utilitarian framework and argue that it is a special case of consequentialism specifically relevant to the health care field. The first two chapters of the book give a basic introduction to the health care economic aspects of QALYs and a basic introduction to the purpose of ethical reasoning. The three subsequent chapters form the core of the book and contain a systematic defense of the QALY approach against all the main criticisms that have been put forward in the literature. The final chapter contains the results of a survey of the attitudes and reasoning of the Australian public with regard to resource allocation.

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