Do patients always prefer quicker treatment?A discrete choice analysis of patients’ stated preferences in the London Patient Choice Project

被引:41
作者
Peter Burge
Nancy Devlin
John Appleby
Charlene Rohr
Jonathan Grant
机构
[1] RAND Europe,Grafton House
[2] City University,City Health Economics Centre
[3] King’s Fund,undefined
关键词
Discrete Choice Experiment; Naive Estimation; Equity Concern; Alternative Provider; Hypothetical Choice;
D O I
10.2165/00148365-200403040-00002
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The London Patient Choice Project (LPCP) was established to offer NHS patients more choice over where and when they receive treatment, and to reduce waiting times. The LPCP offered those patients waiting around 6 months for elective procedures a choice of treatment at an alternative NHS or private hospital, or treatment at an overseas hospital.
引用
收藏
页码:183 / 194
页数:11
相关论文
共 19 条
[1]  
Ryan M.(2003)Using discrete choice experiments to value health care programmes: current practice and future research reflections Appl Health Econ Health Policy 2 55-64
[2]  
Gerard K.(1976)Analytical approach to marketing decisions in health-care organizations Oper Res 24 973-90
[3]  
Wind Y.(2000)Trade-offs between location and waiting times in the provision of health care: the case of elective surgery on the Isle of Wight J Public Health Med 22 202-10
[4]  
Spitz L.K.(1990)Contingent valuation of time spent on NHS waiting lists Econ J 100 193-9
[5]  
Ryan M.(1994)The disutility of time spent on the United Kingdom’s National Health Service waiting lists J Hum Resour 30 677-700
[6]  
Mclntosh E.(1984)Reliability and validation of conjoint analysis and self-explicated weights: a comparison J Mark Res 21 456-62
[7]  
Dean T.(1983)External validity tests of laboratory studies of information integration Organ Behav Hum Perform 31 173-93
[8]  
Propper C.(1975)The jackknife: toy, tool or two-edged weapon? Statistician 24 79-100
[9]  
Propper C.(1974)The jackknife: a review Biometrika 61 1-14
[10]  
Leigh T.W.(2003)Stated preference methods in health care evaluation: an emerging methodological paradigm in health economics Appl Health Econ Health Policy 2 213-24