
In Valuing Health Daniel M. Hausman provides a philosophically sophisticated overview of generic health measurement that suggests improvements in standard methods and proposes a radical alternative. He shows how to avoid relying on surveys and instead evaluate health states directly. Hausman goes on to tackle the deep problems of evaluation, offering an account of fundamental evaluation that does not presuppose the assignment of values to the properties and consequences of alternatives.After discussing the purposes of generic health measurement, Hausman defends a naturalistic concept of health and its relations to measures such as quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) and disability-adjusted life years (DALYs). In examining current health-measurement systems, Valuing Health clarifies their value commitments and the objections to relying on preference surveys to assign values to health states. Relying on an interpretation of liberal political philosophy, Hausman argues that the public value of health states should be understood in terms of the activity limits and suffering that health states impose.Hausman also addresses the moral conundrums that arise when policy-makers attempt to employ the values of health states to estimate the health benefits of alternative policies and to adopt the most cost-effective. He concludes with a general discussion of the difficulties of combining consequentialist and non-consequentialist moral considerations in policy-making.
This book investigates the philosophical foundations of generic health measurement and proposes a methodology for evaluating health states that avoids reliance on subjective preference surveys. Daniel M. Hausman, a philosopher specializing in the intersection of economics and ethics, utilizes a framework rooted in liberal political philosophy to critique current metrics like QALYs and DALYs. He argues that health valuation should be grounded in objective assessments of activity limitations and suffering rather than individual preference-based data.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in bioethics and health economics recognize this work as a rigorous philosophical examination of the value commitments inherent in public health metrics. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for scholars and policy theorists interested in the ethical underpinnings of health resource allocation.
Page Count:
288
Publication Date:
2015-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190233214
ISBN-13:
9780190233211
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