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If the NHS is serious about equity it must offer guidance when principles conflict
Concerns about equitable provision and financing of
health care have characterised the NHS since its foundation. Evidence of persisting and, in some cases, widening health inequalities, gathered since the publication of the Black report,1 has
progressively raised equity to a high rank among health policy
objectives.2 Though the general aim of reducing health
inequalities appears uncontroversial, the practical notions of equity
that should inform policy and the ways in which these should be
implemented are far from clear. Even more importantly, there is no
consensus on how to deal with policies that may cause a conflict
between the goals of equity and efficiency In a report recently published by the NHS Health Technology Assessment
programme4 we examined examples of the equity-efficiency dilemma that the NHS is facing. The analysis of three case
studies The NHS policy on cervical cancer screening has been primarily aimed at
maximising coverage by using powerful economic incentives to general
practitioners. The issue of low participation by women at high
risk5 (particularly those in disadvantaged socioeconomic groups6) has been less of a concern. The programme could
have achieved the same cost effectiveness with less extensive but more even coverage. The number of cases of invasive cancer avoided in 1997 is likely to be 60-85% of the number of cases that might have been
avoided if screening rates had increased uniformly in different social
groups after the introduction of target payments to general
practitioners.4 The equity principle underlying this NHS
policy is one of equal access (rather than outcome) for all women,
where access is defined purely from the perspective of the healthcare provider.
Renal transplantation consistently generates health improvements and
economic savings, but kidneys are in short supply and priorities for
access to this service must be set. The UK Donor Kidney Allocation
Scheme7 provides an allocation algorithm in which the
recipient's age plays an important part. Priority is given to
recipients aged 0-17 over those 18 and older, and within the older
group a decreasing priority is associated with increasing age. Younger
recipients are favoured in the allocation of younger donors' kidneys,
with greater survival benefits. These age priorities are not fully
supported by evidence on effectiveness8 and
efficiency9 grounds, but Sickle cell disease disproportionately affects certain ethnic minority
groups. The UK Standing Medical Advisory Committee recommended the use
of universal, rather than selective, neonatal screening policies when
ethnic minorities with a high risk comprise more than 15% of the
population.12 At this threshold the cost of universal
screening is as high as £430 000 to £1m per life year saved
(depending on the ethnic minority mix) compared with selective
screening.4 The adoption of universal screening does not
appear to be justified by concerns for equity across ethnic groups, as
the benefits to the white northern European majority would still be
very small. Rather, it aims at reducing the number of cases missed
because of inaccuracies in the selection. This NHS policy may reflect
an aspiration to equal access for equal need, but one pursued at a very
high cost. Significant efficiency gains may be sacrificed for what
seems to be an inappropriate conception of equity in this context.
More examples of inconsistency can be found among current NHS policies,
and even greater variation could be unveiled. But is it realistic to
expect health policymakers to develop sound and consistent policies in
the absence of evidence about the distributional effects of healthcare
provision? Is it realistic to expect them to address the equity versus
efficiency dilemma? A systematic review of the literature on healthcare
economic evaluations published in 1987-974 shows a
complete neglect of the equity dimension within the studies surveyed.
Not only did these studies fail to incorporate equity measures in their
cost effectiveness calculations, they did not even provide enough
information for decision makers to make their own judgments about the
distributional impact of given policies Our three case studies show the lack of a clear and consistent
definition of equity and the failure to strike an acceptable balance
between the policy goals of equity and efficiency when these conflict.
In different ways researchers and policymakers share responsibility for
the inconsistent pursuit of equity in the NHS.
(f.sassi{at}lse.ac.uk) Department of Social Policy and LSE Health and Social Care,
London School of Economics and Political Science, London WC2A 2AE Health Policy Unit, Department of Public Health and Policy,
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London WC1E 7HT
that is, those that may
improve efficiency while increasing health inequalities or improve
fairness while decreasing efficiency. The equity versus efficiency
dilemma3 has been virtually ignored in the political
debate, often leading to inconsistent judgments in the development of
health policies.
cervical cancer screening, renal transplantation, and neonatal
screening for sickle cell disease
shows inconsistencies between NHS
policies and a lack of guiding principles to support the pursuit of
equity in health care.
of more relevance for our
purposes
not even on equity grounds, as some studies have shown that
the public would rank older children over younger
ones.
10 11
Although explicitly formulated in some
respects, this NHS policy again appears to lack a clear reference to a
guiding equity principle.
for example, on the
characteristics of the population affected by the policy or on the
policy's effectiveness and cost effectiveness in subgroups.
Julian Le Grand
Luke Archard
| 1. | Department of Health and Social Services. Inequalities in health: the Black report. London: DHSS, 1980. |
| 2. | Department of Health. Saving lives: our healthier nation. London: Stationery Office, 1999. |
| 3. | Wagstaff A. QALYs and the equity-efficiency trade-off. J Health Econ 1991; 10: 21-41[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 4. | Sassi F, Archard L, Le Grand J. Equity and the economic evaluation of health care. Health Technol Assess 2001;5(3). |
| 5. | National Audit Office. The performance of the NHS cervical screening programme in England. London: Stationery Office, 1998. |
| 6. | Brown J, Harding S, Bethune A, Rosato M. Incidence of Health of the Nation cancers by social class. Population Trends 1997; 90: 40-47. |
| 7. | United Kingdom Transplant Support Service Authority. New kidney allocation scheme. Bristol: UKTSSA, NHS Special Health Authority, 1999. |
| 8. |
Wolfe R, Ashby V, Milford E, Ojo AO, Ettenger RE, Agodoa LY, et al.
Comparison of mortality in all patients on dialysis, patients on dialysis awaiting transplantation, and recipients of a first cadaveric transplant.
N Engl J Med
1999;
341:
1725-1730 |
| 9. | Garner T, Dardis R. Cost-effectiveness analysis of end-stage renal disease treatments. Med Care 1987; 25: 25-34[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 10. | Busschbach JJV, Hessing DJ, de Charro FT. The utility of health at different stages in life: a quantitative approach. Soc Sci Med 1993; 37: 153-158. |
| 11. | Lewis PA, Charny M. Which of two individuals do you treat when only their ages are different and you can't treat both? J Med Ethics 1989; 15: 29-32. |
| 12. | Department of Health. Report of a working party of the Standing Medical Advisory Committee on sickle cell, thalassaemia, and other haemoglobinopathies. London: HMSO, 1993. |
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