Navigating Public Policy Responses to a Pandemic: The Balancing Act Between Physical Health, Mental Health, and Household Income

Aug 1, 2024, 00:00 AM
10.1016/j.jval.2024.04.019
https://www.valueinhealthjournal.com/article/S1098-3015(24)02351-9/fulltext
Section Title : PREFERENCE-BASED ASSESSMENTS
Section Order : 1121
First Page : 1121

Objective

During COVID-19, governments imposed restrictions that reduced pandemic-related health risks but likely increased personal and societal mental health risk, partly through reductions in household income. This study aimed to quantify the public’s willingness to accept trade-offs between pandemic health risks, household income reduction, and increased risk of mental illness that may result from future pandemic-related policies.

Methods

A total of 547 adults from an online panel participated in a discrete choice experiment where they were asked to choose between hypothetical future pandemic scenarios. Each scenario was characterized by personal and societal risks of dying from the pandemic, experiencing long-term complications, developing anxiety/depression, and reductions in household income. A latent class regression was used to estimate trade-offs.

Results

Respondents state a willingness to make trade-offs across these attributes if the benefits are large enough. They are willing to accept 0.8% lower household income (0.7-1.0), 2.7% higher personal risk of anxiety/depression (1.8-3.6), or 3.2% higher societal rate of anxiety/depression (1.7-4.7) in exchange for 300 fewer deaths from the pandemic.

Conclusion

Results reveal that individuals are willing to accept lower household income and higher rates of mental illness, both personal and societal, if the physical health benefits are large enough. Respondents placed greater emphasis on maintaining personal, as opposed to societal, mental health risk and were most interested in preventing pandemic-related deaths. Governments should consider less restrictive policies when pandemics have high morbidity but low mortality to avoid the prospect of improving physical health while simultaneously reducing net social welfare.

https://www.valueinhealthjournal.com/action/showCitFormats?pii=S1098-3015(24)02351-9&doi=10.1016/j.jval.2024.04.019
HEOR Topics :
Tags :
  • discrete choice
  • mental health
  • pandemic
  • trade-offs
  • willingness to accept
Regions :