Eliciting people's preferences for the distribution of health: A procedure for a more precise estimation of distributional weights
In order to incorporate distributional concerns into cost-effectiveness analysis, it would be useful to elicit distributional weights that express people's valuation of marginal health gains at various levels of health. Distributional preferences are commonly elicited either through a person trade off (PTO) or a gain trade off (GTO) technique. An inherent problem of the GTO is that it is based on the valuation of non-marginal health gains. In practice, many contributions using the PTO also focus on non-marginal health gains. This paper demonstrates that the failure to distinguish appropriately between marginal and non-marginal health gains may lead to seriously misleading estimates of distributional weights. Moreover, the paper proposes a methodology for utilising information obtained through non-marginal analysis more efficiently in order to obtain more reliable estimates of distributional weights. The methodology was successfully applied in an empirical study of age weights.
Year of publication: |
2009
|
---|---|
Authors: | Mæstad, Ottar ; Norheim, Ole Frithjof |
Published in: |
Journal of Health Economics. - Elsevier, ISSN 0167-6296. - Vol. 28.2009, 3, p. 570-577
|
Publisher: |
Elsevier |
Keywords: | Health equity Distributional weights Eliciting preferences |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Mæstad, Ottar, (2012)
-
Mæstad, Ottar, (2009)
-
Hangoma, Peter, (2024)
- More ...