The importance of Perspective in the Measurement of Quality-adjusted Life Years
- 1 February 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Medical Decision Making
- Vol. 17 (1) , 33-41
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0272989x9701700104
Abstract
Scaling instruments for the measurement of quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) incor porate either a personal or an impersonal perspective on the benefits of a health intervention and either do or do not incorporate considerations of equity. This paper sets out three hypotheses concerning perspective and equity: 1) that more equally distributed benefits will be preferred to less equally distributed benefits; 2) that the preference value elicited for a health benefit will be greater when the respondent to a QALY questionnaire is a potential beneficiary; and 3) that, by comparison with personal preferences, individuals will be more concerned with the quantity than the quality of life in other people. These hypotheses were tested using two existing instruments and two other instruments that were created for this study. Results gave no support to the third hypothesis; some support to the first hypothesis, and strong support for the sec ond hypothesis. It is concluded that perspective can significantly alter the values in corporated in a QALY instrument. The policy implications of the results are twofold. First, they give some support to the view that distributional consequences of health programs are of importance to the population and that they should be included in the evaluation of any health program. Second, they indicate that an evaluation should consider whether the health-state values to be obtained should incorporate an imper sonal perspective reflecting the purely "social" judgment of a health planner or a per spective reflecting self-interest. Key words: quality-adjusted life years; scaling instru ments ; equity; preferences; policy. (Med Decis Making 1997;17:33-41)Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Maximizing health benefits vs egalitarianism: An Australian survey of health issuesSocial Science & Medicine, 1995
- Who cares about cost? Does economic analysis impose or reflect social values?Health Policy, 1995
- Agency in health care with an endogenous budget constraintJournal of Health Economics, 1994
- Cost utility analysis: What should be measured?Social Science & Medicine, 1994
- The qaly—a measure of social value rather than individual utility?Health Economics, 1994
- Persons vs years: Two ways of eliciting implicit weightsHealth Economics, 1994
- Generalizability of valuations on health states collected with the EuroQolc‐questionnaireHealth Economics, 1993
- The validity of a visual analogue scale in determining social utility weights for health statesThe International Journal of Health Planning and Management, 1991
- QALYs and the equity-efficiency trade-offJournal of Health Economics, 1991
- The use of QALYs in health care decision makingSocial Science & Medicine, 1989