Decisions in medical contexts have immediate and obvious consequences in terms of health and sometimes death or survival. Medical decisions also have less obvious and less immediate consequences, including effects on the long-term physical and mental well-being of patients, their families and of care-givers, as well as on the distribution of scarce medical resources. Some of these consequences are hard to measure and estimate. Even harder, perhaps, is the determination of the relative value of different consequences. How should consequences be evaluated? How do uncertainties and biases affect our evaluations of consequences? What influence should our evaluations of consequences have on our actions? These questions are all philosophical in n...
This article is a personal account of the author's experiences as an economist working in medical de...
Novel interventions that are effective and safe but costly suggest the importance of questions about...
The term utility can be interpreted in terms of the hedonic experience of an outcome (experienced ut...
Decisions in medical contexts have immediate and obvious consequences in terms of health and sometim...
P atients ’ values are fundamental to decision mod-els, cost-effectiveness analyses, and pharma-coec...
Decision making in healthcare often involves decision alternatives that vary on different dimensions...
One hundred eight college students (Study 1) and 109 elderly adults (Study 2) rated 28 health impair...
Aim: As the decision-making science progresses, in recent years, there has been an increasing discus...
Metrics for valuing environmental, health, and safety policies should be consistent with both the pr...
Valuing the relative benefits of different treatments helps us to allocate scarce healthcare resourc...
ABSTRACT. Despite its virtues, lay decision-making in medicine shares with professional decision-mak...
Even when good scientific data are available, people's interpretation of risks and benefits will dif...
When valuing health states, health economists often ask respondents how many years of life in poor h...
In this paper we develop a conceptual framework and model for valuing risks to an individual's healt...
We review decision-making along the cancer continuum in the contemporary context of informed and sha...
This article is a personal account of the author's experiences as an economist working in medical de...
Novel interventions that are effective and safe but costly suggest the importance of questions about...
The term utility can be interpreted in terms of the hedonic experience of an outcome (experienced ut...
Decisions in medical contexts have immediate and obvious consequences in terms of health and sometim...
P atients ’ values are fundamental to decision mod-els, cost-effectiveness analyses, and pharma-coec...
Decision making in healthcare often involves decision alternatives that vary on different dimensions...
One hundred eight college students (Study 1) and 109 elderly adults (Study 2) rated 28 health impair...
Aim: As the decision-making science progresses, in recent years, there has been an increasing discus...
Metrics for valuing environmental, health, and safety policies should be consistent with both the pr...
Valuing the relative benefits of different treatments helps us to allocate scarce healthcare resourc...
ABSTRACT. Despite its virtues, lay decision-making in medicine shares with professional decision-mak...
Even when good scientific data are available, people's interpretation of risks and benefits will dif...
When valuing health states, health economists often ask respondents how many years of life in poor h...
In this paper we develop a conceptual framework and model for valuing risks to an individual's healt...
We review decision-making along the cancer continuum in the contemporary context of informed and sha...
This article is a personal account of the author's experiences as an economist working in medical de...
Novel interventions that are effective and safe but costly suggest the importance of questions about...
The term utility can be interpreted in terms of the hedonic experience of an outcome (experienced ut...