Health technology assessment between our health care system and our health: Exploring the potential of reflexive HTA

Author: Grin, John

Source: Poiesis & Praxis, Volume 2, Numbers 2-3, April 2004 , pp. 157-174(18)

Publisher: Springer

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Abstract:

In this contribution, I wish to explore the potential of health technology assessment and ethics for increasing our capacity to pre-empt the shortcomings and undesired consequences of modern health care while maintaining its benefits. Central is the presumption that in case of some health problems this cannot be done unless we explicitly reconsider some features of the modern health care system, especially those related to its strong reliance on scientific rationality and the strong role played by medical professionals.

So as to both maintain the benefits of advanced health care and ensure that it produces less reason for concern, we need to reconsider our approach to rationality—and maybe even the way in which we build our health care system around that rationality. That is, we need to introduce an element of reflexivity. Two types of circumstances are being explored in which such reflexivity may prove worthwhile: controversies on side effects, and persistent problems encountered in optimising health care. Drawing on brief discussions of typical cases, we explore the potential of reflexive HTA and its methodical prerequisites.

We conclude that ethicists may contribute to reflexive HTA, if they combine a hermeneutic—and often also participative—methodology with a solid understanding of the relation between the health problem under scrutiny and more general critique of the health care system. Insights from the areas of science and technology studies, as well as from social philosophy may be critical items in their tool kit.

Document Type: Research article

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10202-003-0049-y

Affiliations: 1: Department of Political Science, University of Amsterdam, O.Z. Achterburgwal 237, 1012 DL, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, Email: j.grin@uva.nl

Publication date: 2004-04-01

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