Abstract :
During 2008, some forms of patient co-payments – in particular,
patients paying privately for additional medicines as part of an episode of care
in the National Health Service – became controversial in political and policy
terms in the UK. In response, the UK Government published a report, the
Richards’ Review, examining the issues. Richards offered a particular policy
solution, but also touched on fundamental principles of social value. Using the
methods of normative policy analysis, we seek to understand these principles
of social value, accepting the Richards’ framework according to which the
relevant arguments can be grouped under the broad headings of equity and
autonomy. None of the arguments on either side are decisive, and, in part, the
policy decision turns on uncertain empirical conjectures.