
Health Programs as Social Programs: Navigating Difficult Healthcare Policy Decisions
Author(s) -
Samuel Kris Case Seshadri
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
the arbutus review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1923-1334
DOI - 10.18357/tar121202120153
Subject(s) - argument (complex analysis) , government (linguistics) , health care , health policy , public health , business , public economics , public relations , actuarial science , medicine , political science , nursing , economics , economic growth , philosophy , linguistics
Apart from public health and preventive medicine campaigns, a health authority funds healthcare programs primarily for the purpose of immediately improving clinical patient out comes. For individual health treatments, funding decisions by Canadian provincial govern ments incorporate some equivalent of a costbenefit calculation,such as the costeffectiveness analysis (CEA). This research is important to health policy makers because it considers the effects of expanding a CEA to analyze societal impacts that are already of importance to the government when the appropriateness or accuracy of the costbenefit calculation is unclear. I use the example of in vitro fertilization funding programs to demonstrate the argument that health programs may also address other relevant issues related to the social determinants of health.