LAUSR.org creates dashboard-style pages of related content for over 1.5 million academic articles. Sign Up to like articles & get recommendations!

Time-Specific Differences in Stated Preferences for Health in the United States.

Photo by bruno_nascimento from unsplash

BACKGROUND Changes over time in health state values from a societal perspective may be an important reason to consider updating societal value sets for preference-based measures of health. OBJECTIVE The… Click to show full abstract

BACKGROUND Changes over time in health state values from a societal perspective may be an important reason to consider updating societal value sets for preference-based measures of health. OBJECTIVE The aim was to examine whether stated health preferences are different between 2002 and 2017, controlling for demographic changes in the United States. METHODS Data from 2002 and 2017 US EQ-5D-3L valuation studies were combined. The primary analysis compared valuations of better-than-dead (BTD) states only, as both studies used the same time trade-off (TTO) method for these states. For worse-than-dead (WTD) states, the 2017 study used the lead-time TTO and the 2002 study used the conventional TTO, which necessitated transformation. Regression models were fitted to BTD values to estimate time-specific differences, adjusting for respondent characteristics. Secondary analyses examined models that fitted WTD values (using linear and nonlinear transformations of the 2002 data) and all values. RESULTS The adjusted BTD-only model showed mean values were higher for 2017 compared with 2002 (βY2017=0.05, P<0.001). WTD-only models showed negative changes over time but that were dependent on the transformation method (linear βY2017=-0.72; nonlinear βY2017=-0.35; both P<0.001). Using all values, 2017 mean valuations were lower using a linear transformation (βY2017=-0.11; P<0.001) but did not differ with the nonlinear transformation. CONCLUSIONS Individuals in 2017 are generally less willing to trade quantity for quality of life compared with 2002. This study provides evidence of time-specific differences in a society's preferences, suggesting that the era in which values were elicited may be an important reason to consider updating societal value sets.

Keywords: time; health; specific differences; time specific; united states; transformation

Journal Title: Medical care
Year Published: 2022

Link to full text (if available)


Share on Social Media:                               Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!

Related content

More Information              News              Social Media              Video              Recommended



                Click one of the above tabs to view related content.