| Literature DB >> 30367434 |
Sophy Barber1, Hilary Bekker2, Joachim Marti3, Sue Pavitt4, Balvinder Khambay5, David Meads6.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Our objective was to develop and test a discrete-choice experiment (DCE) survey to elicit adolescent and parent preferences for dental care for hypodontia (a developmental condition where one or more teeth fail to develop).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30367434 PMCID: PMC6335368 DOI: 10.1007/s40271-018-0338-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient ISSN: 1178-1653 Impact factor: 3.883
Fig. 1Steps in the development of the discrete-choice experiment (DCE) survey
List of all attributes of hypodontia care identified from the mixed methods in stage one with an indication of the source
| Category | Attribute concept | Attribute | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Service delivery | Service factors | Treatment planning | SR, PR |
| Cost | Direct costs | SR, PR, CC, SI, SM | |
| Impact of treatment |
| SR, PR, CC, SI, SM | |
| Risk |
| SR, PR, CC, SI, SM | |
| Time |
| SR, PR, CC, SI, SM | |
| Treatment outcome | Appearance | Smile attractiveness | SR, PR, CC, SI, SM |
| Function |
| SR, PR, CC, SI, SM | |
| Psychosocial | Wellbeing | SI, SM | |
| Dental health | Tooth health | SR, PR | |
| Harms | Generic | PR | |
| Long-term | Psychosocial effect | SI, SM |
Attributes selected for pre-testing in the discrete-choice experiment are shown in bold font
CC clinical consultation, PR patient resource, SI Short interview, SM social media, SR systematic review
Description of the pilot and final survey
| Pilot survey | Final survey | |
|---|---|---|
| Attributes and levels | Seven attributes | Six attributes |
| Two to three levels | Two to three levels | |
| Construction of tasks | Full profile | Full profile |
| Paired profiles | Paired profiles | |
| Inclusion of opt-out after forced choice | Inclusion of opt-out after forced choice | |
| Generic labelling | Generic labelling | |
| Experimental design | Partial factorial (full factorial gives 972 profiles) | Partial factorial (full factorial gives 324 profiles) |
| Experimental design— | Experimental design— | |
| 32 tasks as four blocks of eight | 28 tasks as four blocks of seven (plus one repeat task per block) | |
| Preference elicitation | Motivation given at start of survey | Motivation given at start of survey and before choice task |
| Explanation prior to choice task with practice task | Explanation prior to choice task with non-dental example and annotated instructions for completion | |
| Choice between pairs | Choice between pairs | |
| Strength of preference and self-reported dfficulty of choice (5-point Likert) | Self-reported difficulty of choice elicited with 3-point categorical scale | |
| Instrument design | Respondent demographics: age, sex, ethnicity, geographical location, number and location of missing teeth, general and dental health, education, income | Respondent demographics: age, sex, ethnicity, geographical location, number and location of missing teeth, education |
| Background information: knowledge, beliefs about dental treatment, decision making, anxiety, impact of hypodontia on quality of life, experience of dental care | Background information: decision making, anxiety, impact of hypodontia on quality of life, experience of dental care | |
| Contextual information: full description of attributes and levels before task | Contextual information: description of attributes before task, attribute levels given in information box | |
| Level of burden: 30–45 minutes to complete | Level of burden: < 30 minutes to complete; mapping screens and colour coding to aid orientation |
MNL multinomial logit
| Including the target population at all stages of the discrete-choice experiment (DCE) development optimised the identification and selection of valid and relevant attributes. |
| The mixed-methods approach to pre-testing provided rich data to guide modifications to the DCE to improve its validity and suitability for use with adolescents. |
| The proposed use of the DCE survey to observe joint adolescent–parent preference elicitation and decision-making processes is supported by evidence gained from this study. |