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Erschienen in: Applied Health Economics and Health Policy 2/2011

01.03.2011 | Short Communication

Public and decision maker stated preferences for pharmaceutical subsidy decisions

A pilot study

verfasst von: Dr Jennifer A. Whitty, Paul A. Scuffham, Sharyn R. Rundle-Thielee

Erschienen in: Applied Health Economics and Health Policy | Ausgabe 2/2011

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Abstract

Background

Consideration of public preferences is desirable when making decisions on the subsidy of pharmaceuticals. Little is known about the preferences of the public for pharmaceutical funding decisions, and no study has directly compared the preferences of members of a pharmaceutical decisionmaking body with those of the public on whose behalf decisions are made.

Objective

This article reports the findings of a pilot discrete-choice experiment (DCE) undertaken to test the concept of evaluating the consistency of public and decision maker preferences for the public subsidy of pharmaceuticals.

Methods

A DCE was used to elicit the relative importance of gains in survival, quality of life (QOL), chance of response success and government costs in pharmaceutical funding decisions, and the impact that the initial severity of illness has on preferences. The DCE was administered to a sample of the Australian public and members of the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee and its Economic Subcommittee. A mixed logit model was employed for analysis.

Results

For both samples, increased survival, QOL and chance of response success, and a reduction in cost or uncertainty (decision makers only), increased the likelihood that a pharmaceutical would be chosen for funding. Both samples were more likely to fund a pharmaceutical that was used for the treatment of severe illness.

Conclusion

This study sets the foundation for future research on the relative importance of decision criteria, the contexts that impact on the criteria and the extent to which funding decisions for pharmaceuticals in Australia and elsewhere are consistent with the preferences of society.
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Fußnoten
1
For the public, 14 of the 4347 choice questions (i.e. 27 choice setsx 161 respondents) were missing. Thus, 4333 valid choice observations were available for analysis. For the decision makers, 2 of the 528 choice questions (i.e. 48 choice sets × 11 respondents) were missing. Thus, 526 valid choice observations were available for analysis. The omitted choice observations appeared to have been missed in error, where respondents had not answered any choice questions on a page.
 
2
The authors thank an anonymous reviewer for this suggestion.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
Public and decision maker stated preferences for pharmaceutical subsidy decisions
A pilot study
verfasst von
Dr Jennifer A. Whitty
Paul A. Scuffham
Sharyn R. Rundle-Thielee
Publikationsdatum
01.03.2011
Verlag
Springer International Publishing
Erschienen in
Applied Health Economics and Health Policy / Ausgabe 2/2011
Print ISSN: 1175-5652
Elektronische ISSN: 1179-1896
DOI
https://doi.org/10.2165/11537150-000000000-00000

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