Citizen's Preferences Regarding Principles to Guide Health-Care Allocation Decisions in Thailand

Abstract

Objectives

The objective of this study was to investigate the extent to which five principles of rationing (lottery, rule of rescue, health maximization, fair innings, and choicism) were preferred by a sample of Thai citizens for selecting patients to receive high-cost therapies.

Methods

A self-administered survey was used for collecting data from a sample of 1000 individuals living in Thailand. Descriptive statistics, factor analysis, and multinomial logistic regression analysis were used for describing and validating the data. Out of the 1000 sample members, 780 (78%) provided usable responses.

Results

The results showed that within specific situations under budget constraints, Thai people used each of the criteria we studied to ration health care including: 1) lottery principle; 2) rule of rescue; 3) health maximization; 4) fair innings; and 5) choicism.

Conclusions

The extent to which the criteria were applied depended on the specific situation placed before the decision-maker. “Choicism” (equalizing opportunity for health) was the most preferred method for rationing when compared to each of the other four principles.

Authors

Vijj Kasemsup Jon C. Schommer Richard R. Cline Ronald S. Hadsall

Your browser is out-of-date

ISPOR recommends that you update your browser for more security, speed and the best experience on ispor.org. Update my browser now

×