A note on the relative importance that people attach to different factors when setting priorities in health care
- 21 February 2003
- journal article
- editorial
- Published by Wiley in Health Expectations
- Vol. 6 (1) , 53-59
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1369-6513.2003.00210.x
Abstract
To explore whether and to what extent people wish to give differential priority when asked to choose between providing health care treatment for different individuals or groups, on the basis of a range of factors, ranging from health gain to the number of dependants a person has. A sample of people resident in York self-completed a questionnaire. The City of York. Twenty-three members of the general public and 29 undergraduate students. The relative importance of factors that people think should be taken into account when choosing between providing health care treatment for individuals or groups. The results suggest that health gain and the consequences for health without treatment are two of the most important considerations. A sample of the general public and undergraduate students wish to take account of a number of personal characteristics when setting priorities in health care.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of discussion and deliberation on the public's views of priority setting in health care: focus group studyBMJ, 1999
- The rationing debate: Rationing health care by age: The case forBMJ, 1997
- Health care rationing: the public's debateBMJ, 1996
- The Person-trade-off Approach to Valuing Health Care ProgramsMedical Decision Making, 1995
- The trade-off between severity of illness and treatment effect in cost-value analysis of health careHealth Policy, 1993
- Allocating scarce resources: A contingency model of distributive justiceJournal of Experimental Social Psychology, 1992
- Value elicitation: Is there anything in there?American Psychologist, 1991
- Which of two individuals do you treat when only their ages are different and you can't treat both?Journal of Medical Ethics, 1989
- Choosing who shall not be treated in the NHSSocial Science & Medicine, 1989
- Prospect Theory: An Analysis of Decision under RiskEconometrica, 1979