Ok friends, this is great and an ENDLESS issue so let's have a quick tweetorial on opportunity costs and why you shouldn't get mad when they exist #epitwitter 1/ https://twitter.com/BrianCAlbrecht/status/1094997227578130432 …
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Having worked in hospital finance, I can GUARANTEE that these decisions have to be made every day Staffing a ward correctly over a high-intensity period might mean cancelling improvement projects 7/
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This doesn't mean that either upscaling to meet demand or quality improvements in a clinical setting are unimportant, but usually the situation forces you to pick one or the other Rarely can you do both 8/pic.twitter.com/b7VnvdNErb
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This is why funding in health is HARD Almost every decision you make has an opportunity cost Sometimes we fund the most cost-effective things. Most of the time, we actually don't 9/
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This has been studied: when push comes to shove, we prioritize saving people - the "Rule of Rescue" - over what is objectively the most cost-effective choice 10/pic.twitter.com/P7APVuJDZB
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Often the trade-off between the two 'roads' of public health is whether we prioritize cost-effectiveness or the ethical imperative to save people who are sick 11/
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But regardless of the difference between two choices, it's worth remembering that opportunity costs come with almost every decision That doesn't mean that we are ignoring one choice It just means we are prioritizing as best we can 12/
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