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Castigating QALYs

Journal of Medical Ethics 15 (3):143-147 (1989)

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  1. Felicitometry: Measuring the 'quality' in quality of life.Charles Kowalski, Steven Pennell & Amiram Vinokur - 2008 - Bioethics 22 (6):307–313.
    Following Bernheim,1 we examine aspects of 'felicitometrics,'2 the measurement of the 'quality' term in Quality of Life (QOL). Bernheim argued that overall QOL is best captured as the Gestalt3 of a global self-assessment and suggested that the Anamnestic Comparative Self Assessment (ACSA) approach, in which subjects' memories of the best and worst times of their lives are used to anchor a Visual Analog Scale (VAS), provided a serious answer to the serious question, 'How have you been?' Bernheim compares and contrasts (...)
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  • Allocating Healthcare By QALYs: The Relevance of Age.John McKie, Helga Kuhse, Jeff Richardson & Peter Singer - 1996 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 5 (4):534.
    What proportion of available healthcare funds should be allocated to hip replacement operations and what proportion to psychiatric care? What proportion should go to cardiac patients and what to newborns in intensive care? What proportion should go to preventative medicine and what to treating existing conditions? In general, how should limited healthcare resources be distributed If not all demands can be met?
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  • Efficiency and Health.T. Hussey - 1997 - Nursing Ethics 4 (3):181-190.
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  • Integrating ethical enquiry and health technology assessment: Limits and opportunities for efficiency and equity.Pedro Gallo - 2004 - Poiesis and Praxis 2 (s 2-3):103-117.
    This paper aims at discussing some contributions, limitations and opportunities that efficiency and equity studies could make to form a better understanding of ethical issues involved in health technology assessment (HTA). Prenatal detection of Down syndrome is used as a case study for further discussions regarding efficiency and equity, as well as other ethical principles including beneficence, non-maleficence and autonomy. The development and use of adequate methods and the need for context appraisal are two imperative issues in this field of (...)
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  • The principle of QALY maximisation as the basis for allocating health care resources.J. Cubbon - 1991 - Journal of Medical Ethics 17 (4):181-184.
    This paper presents a case for allocating health care resources so as to maximise Quality Adjusted Life Years (QALYs). Throughout parallels are drawn with the grounds for adopting utilitarianism. QALYs are desirable because they are essential for human flourishing and goal-attainment. In conditions of scarcity the principle of QALY maximisation may involve unequal treatment of different groups of people; and it is argued that this is not objectionable. Doctors in their dealings with patients should not be continually consulting the principle (...)
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  • QALYs—A Threat to our Quality of Life?Anne Haydock - 1992 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 9 (2):183-188.
    QALY calcuations are currently being considered in the UK as a way of showing how the National Health Service (NHS) can do the most good with its resources. After providing a brief summary of how QALY calculations work and the most common arguments for and against using them to set NHS priorities, I suggest that they are an inadequate measure of the good done by the NHS because they refer only to its effects on what will be defined as the (...)
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