Comparing Increments in Utility of Health- An Individual-based Approach

Abstract

Background

Many economic evaluations of health care changes rely on quality-adjusted life year (QALY) estimates. Notably, though, the QALY approach values health states rather than changes in health states. Hence, a gain in utility of health is only indirectly valued through an ex ante preference elicitation of health states and the subsequent subtraction of health state values from one another, rather than being valued directly. There is therefore an underlying assumption that individuals, from an ex ante perspective ceteris paribus, would be indifferent between equal utility increments from health states with different baseline utilities.

Objective

The aim of this paper is to develop a method that would allow us to measure individual-based preferences over utility increments from different baselines. We elicit our data using face-to-face interviews on a sample of UK individuals.

Results

Overall, we find that gains of “equal” utility increments from different baselines are not found to be equally preferable by the individual.

Conclusions

The results indicate that the subtraction approach could lead to sub-optimal resource allocations and suggest that a new approach which values health changes directly would better reflect individual preferences. This paper provides the foundations for a method to achieve this.

Authors

Matthew Taylor Susan Chilton Sarah Ronaldson Hugh Metcalf Jytte Seested Nielsen

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