• Health policy · Nov 2014

    Transparency in Canadian public drug advisory committees.

    • Zahava R S Rosenberg-Yunger and Ahmed M Bayoumi.
    • School of Health Services Management, Ted Rogers School of Management, Ryerson University, 350 Victoria St., Toronto, ON, Canada M5B 2K3. Electronic address: zahavars@gmail.com.
    • Health Policy. 2014 Nov 1; 118 (2): 255-63.

    BackgroundTransparency in health care resource allocation decisions is a criterion of a fair process. We used qualitative methods to explore transparency across 11 Canadian drug advisory committees.MethodsWe developed seven criteria to assess transparency (disclosure of members' names, disclosure of membership selection criteria, disclosure of conflict of interest guidelines and members' conflicts, public posting of decisions not to fund drugs, public posting of rationales for decisions, stakeholder input, and presence of an appeals mechanism) and two sub-criteria for when rationales were posted (direct website link and readability). We interviewed a purposeful sample of key informants who were conversant in English and a current or past member of either a committee or a stakeholder group. We analyzed data using a thematic approach. Interviewing continued until saturation was reached.ResultsWe examined documents from 10 committees and conducted 27 interviews. The median number of criteria addressed by committees was 2 (range 0-6). Major interview themes included addressing: (1) accessibility issues, including stakeholders' degree of access to the decision making process and appeal mechanisms; (2) communication issues, including improving internal and external communication and public access to information; and (3) confidentiality issues, including the use of proprietary evidence.ConclusionMost committees have some mechanisms to address transparency but none had a fully transparent process. The most important ways to improve transparency include creating formal appeal mechanisms, improving communication, and establishing consistent rules about the use of, and public access to, proprietary evidence.Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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