In this paper we present results on the effect of medical experience on the economic evaluation of health policies utilizing the method of discrete choice experiments. Subjects in two split samples were asked about choice situations involving alternative profiles defined by the attributes of an innovative program for cervical cancer screening. The first sample was formed by expert medical practitioners who were familiar with the illness and its potential treatments. A second sample was formed by young undergraduate students in social sciences who were not familiar with the illness or with the potential benefits of screening programmes. The statistical comparison between both subsamples utilizes a robust method for discrete choice models whi...
Given that in times of crisis the burden of chronic disease is increasing, preventive interventions ...
Discrete choice experiments (DCEs) are a way to assess priority-setting in health care provision. Th...
Background: Economic evaluation of mandatory health programmes generally do not consider the utility...
The aim of this thesis is to broaden work in the area of discrete choice experiments (DCEs) in healt...
Using Discrete Choice Experiments to Value Health and Health Care takes a fresh and contemporay look...
To investigate the impact of health policies on individual well-being, estimate the value to society...
Background: Discrete choice experiments (DCEs) are increasingly used in health economics to address ...
Discrete choice experiments (DCEs) have become a commonly used instrument in health economics. This ...
There has been growing interest in discrete choice experiments (DCEs) in health economics over the l...
Since their introduction in health economics in the early 1990s, research in the area of health care...
textabstractHealth economics is concerned with issues related to scarcity in the allocation of healt...
Background Discrete choice experiments (DCEs) are increasingly used in health economics to address ...
Background - Economic evaluation of mandatory health programmes generally do not consider the utilit...
One method that is increasingly being used in health economics to elicit stated preferences concerni...
Compared to many applied areas of economics, health economics has a strong tradition in eliciting an...
Given that in times of crisis the burden of chronic disease is increasing, preventive interventions ...
Discrete choice experiments (DCEs) are a way to assess priority-setting in health care provision. Th...
Background: Economic evaluation of mandatory health programmes generally do not consider the utility...
The aim of this thesis is to broaden work in the area of discrete choice experiments (DCEs) in healt...
Using Discrete Choice Experiments to Value Health and Health Care takes a fresh and contemporay look...
To investigate the impact of health policies on individual well-being, estimate the value to society...
Background: Discrete choice experiments (DCEs) are increasingly used in health economics to address ...
Discrete choice experiments (DCEs) have become a commonly used instrument in health economics. This ...
There has been growing interest in discrete choice experiments (DCEs) in health economics over the l...
Since their introduction in health economics in the early 1990s, research in the area of health care...
textabstractHealth economics is concerned with issues related to scarcity in the allocation of healt...
Background Discrete choice experiments (DCEs) are increasingly used in health economics to address ...
Background - Economic evaluation of mandatory health programmes generally do not consider the utilit...
One method that is increasingly being used in health economics to elicit stated preferences concerni...
Compared to many applied areas of economics, health economics has a strong tradition in eliciting an...
Given that in times of crisis the burden of chronic disease is increasing, preventive interventions ...
Discrete choice experiments (DCEs) are a way to assess priority-setting in health care provision. Th...
Background: Economic evaluation of mandatory health programmes generally do not consider the utility...