Background
Policy makers across the political spectrum, as well as many clinicians and physician professional associations, have proposed
that better information on comparative clinical effectiveness should be a key element of any solution to the US health-care
cost crisis. This superficial consensus hides intense disagreements over critical issues essential to any new public effort
to promote more comparative effectiveness research (CER).
Methods and Results
This article reviews the background for these disputes, summarizes the different perspectives represented by policy makers
and advocates, and offers a framework to aid both practicing and academic internists in understanding the key elements of
the emerging debate. Regarding the fundamental question of “what is CER,” disagreements rage over whether value or cost effectiveness
should be a consideration, and how specific patient perspectives should be reflected in the development and the use of such
research. The question of how to pay for CER invokes controversies over the role of the market in producing such information
and the private (e.g., insurers and employers) versus public responsibility for its production. The financing debate further
highlights the high stakes of comparative effectiveness research, and the risks of stakeholder interests subverting any public
process. Accordingly there are a range of proposals for the federal government’s role in prioritization, development, and
dissemination of CER.
Conclusion
The internal medicine community, with its long history of commitment to scientific medical practice and its leadership in
evidence–based medicine, should have a strong interest and play an active role in this debate.
Key Words comparative effectiveness research (CER) - cost effectiveness analysis (CEA) - policy debate - health care costs