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USING DISCRETE CHOICE EXPERIMENTS TO VALUE HEALTH AND HEALTH CARE In recent years, there has been a growing interest in the development and application of discrete choice experiments (DCEs) within health economics. The use of this re- tively new instrument to value health and health care has now evolved to the point where a general text for practising professionals seems appropriate. The few existing books in this area are either research monographs or focus almost entirely on more advanced t- ics. By contrast, this book serves as a general reference for those applying the technique to health care for the first time as well as for more experienced practitioners. Thus, the book is relevant to postgraduate students and applied researchers who have an interest in the use of DCEs for valuing health and health care. Contributions are made by a number of leading experts in the field, enabling the book to contain a uniquely rich mix of research applications and methodological developments. Part 1 summarises how DCEs can be implemented, from experimental design to data analysis and the interpretation of results. In many ways, this can be regarded as a crash course on the conduct of DCEs. Extensive reference is made throughout to other sources of literature where the interested reader can find further details. Part 2 presents a series of case studies, illustrating the breadth of applications in health e- nomics.
Rigorous overview of DCE methods and application in health economics Transparency in how to apply current thinking on experimental design to health economics applications Clear and illuminating series of applied case studies demonstrating different types of choice modelling techniques and the use of results for policy analysis Clear and illuminating series of methodological case studies by internationally respected leaders in their field
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Using Discrete Choice Experiments to Value Health and Health Care takes a fresh and contemporay look at the growing interest in the development and application of discrete choice experiments (DCEs) within the field of health economics. The authors have written it with the purpose of giving the reader a better understanding of issues raised in the design and application of DCEs in health economics. The use of this relatively new instrument to value health and health care has now evolved to the point where a general text is necessary. The few existing books in this area are either research monographs or focus almost entirely on more advanced topics. By contrast, this book serves as a general reference for those applying the technique to health care for the first time as well as more experienced practitioners. Thus the book is relevant to post-graduate students and applied researchers with an interest in the use of DCEs for valuing health and health care and has international appeal.
The book comprises Chapters by highly regarded academics with experience of applying DCEs in the area of health. The first part of the book summarises how DCEs can be implemented, from experimental design to data analysis and the interpretation of results. In many ways this can be regarded as a crash course on the conduct of DCEs. Extensive reference is made throughout to other sources of literature where the interested reader can find further details. The book also includes a series of case studies illustrating the breadth of applications in health economics and some key methodological issues. Finally there is an overview of research issues discussed which the editors believe are at the leading edge of this field.
Contenu
Dces: What are they and their Application in Health A User's Guide.- Discrete Choice Experiments in a Nutshell.- Designing Discrete Choice Experiments for Health Care.- Practical Issues in Conducting a Discrete Choice Experiment.- Case Studies in Valuing Health and Health Care.- Using Discrete Choice Experiments to Go Beyond Clinical Outcomes when Evaluating Clinical Practice.- Using Discrete Choice Modelling to Investigate Breast Screening Participation.- Preferences for Health Care Programmes: Results from a general population discrete choice survey.- Examining the Preferences of Health Care Providers: An application to hospital consultants.- Methodological Issues.- The Price Proxy in Discrete Choice Experiments: Issues of Relevance for Future Research.- Irrational Stated Preferences: A quantitative and qualitative investigation.- Using Stated Preference and Revealed Preference Data Fusion Modelling in Health Care.- Conclusions.- Concluding Thoughts.
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