| Literature DB >> 31462165 |
Barry Dewitt1, Baruch Fischhoff1,2, Alexander L Davis1, Stephen B Broomell3, Mark S Roberts4,5, Janel Hanmer4.
Abstract
Background. In a systematic review, Engel et al. found large variation in the exclusion criteria used to remove responses held not to represent genuine preferences in health state valuation studies. We offer an empirical approach to characterizing the similarities and differences among such criteria. Setting. Our analyses use data from an online survey that elicited preferences for health states defined by domains from the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS®), with a U.S. nationally representative sample (N = 1164). Methods. We use multidimensional scaling to investigate how 10 commonly used exclusion criteria classify participants and their responses. Results. We find that the effects of exclusion criteria do not always match the reasons advanced for applying them. For example, excluding very high and very low values has been justified as removing aberrant responses. However, people who give very high and very low values prove to be systematically different in ways suggesting that such responses may reflect different processes. Conclusions. Exclusion criteria intended to remove low-quality responses from health state valuation studies may actually remove deliberate but unusual ones. A companion article examines the effects of the exclusion criteria on societal utility estimates.Entities:
Keywords: exclusion criteria; health state valuation; preference-based measures; study design
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31462165 PMCID: PMC6791737 DOI: 10.1177/0272989X19856617
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Decis Making ISSN: 0272-989X Impact factor: 2.583