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  • Victoria Charlton
    King's College London
  • Michael diStefano
    The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
  • Polly Mitchell
    King's College London
  • Liz Morrell
    University of Oxford
  • Leah Rand
    Harvard Medical School
  • Gabriele Badano
    University of York
  • Rachel Baker
    Glasgow Caledonian University
  • Michael Calnan
    University of Kent
  • Kalipso Chalkidou
    Imperial College London
  • Anthony Culyer
    University of York
  • Daniel Howden
    University of Leeds
  • Dyfrig Hughes
  • James Lomas
    University of York
  • Catherine Max
  • Christopher McCabe
    Queen's University, Belfast
  • James F. O'Mahony
    Trinity College Dublin
  • Mike Paulden
    University of Alberta
  • Zack Pemberton-Whiteley
    Leukaemia Care
  • Annette Rid
    National Institutes of Health
  • Paul Scuffham
    Griffith University, Queensland
  • Mark Sculpher
    University of York
  • Koonal Shah
    National Institute for Health and Care Excellence
  • Albert Weale
    University College London
  • Gry Wester
It is acknowledged that health technology assessment (HTA) is an inherently value-based activity that makes use of normative reasoning alongside empirical evidence. But the language used to conceptualise and articulate HTA’s normative aspects is demonstrably unnuanced, imprecise and inconsistently employed, undermining transparency and preventing proper scrutiny of the rationales on which decisions are based. This paper – developed through a cross-disciplinary collaboration of 24 researchers with expertise in healthcare priority-setting – seeks to address this problem by offering a clear definition of key terms and distinguishing between the types of normative commitment invoked during HTA, thus providing a novel conceptual framework for the articulation of reasoning. Through application to a hypothetical case, it is illustrated how this framework can operate as a practical tool through which HTA practitioners and policymakers can enhance the transparency and coherence of their decision-making, while enabling others to hold them more easily to account. The framework is offered as a starting point for further discussion amongst those with a desire to enhance the legitimacy and fairness of HTA by facilitating practical public reasoning, in which decisions are made on behalf of the public, in public view, through a chain of reasoning that withstands ethical scrutiny.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)153-173
JournalHealth Economics, Policy and Law
Volume19
Issue number2
Early online date27 Sept 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2024

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