| Literature DB >> 31650439 |
Simon McNamara1, John Holmes2, Abigail K Stevely2, Aki Tsuchiya2,3.
Abstract
There is growing interest in the use of "distributionally-sensitive" forms of economic evaluation that capture both the impact of an intervention upon average population health and the distribution of that health amongst the population. This review aims to inform the conduct of distributionally sensitive evaluations in the UK by answering three questions: (1) How averse are the UK public towards inequalities in lifetime health between socioeconomic groups? (2) Does this aversion differ depending upon the type of health under consideration? (3) Are the UK public as averse to inequalities in health between socioeconomic groups as they are to inequalities in health between neutrally framed groups? EMBASE, MEDLINE, EconLit, and SSCI were searched for stated preference studies relevant to these questions in October 2017. Of the 2155 potentially relevant papers identified, 15 met the predefined hierarchical eligibility criteria. Seven elicited aversion to inequalities in health between socioeconomic groups, and eight elicited aversion between neutrally labelled groups. We find general, although not universal, evidence for aversion to inequalities in lifetime health between socioeconomic groups, albeit with significant variation in the strength of that preference across studies. Second, limited evidence regarding the impact of the type of health upon aversion. Third, some evidence that the UK public are more averse to inequalities in lifetime health when those inequalities are presented in the context of socioeconomic inequality than when presented in isolation.Entities:
Keywords: Equity weighting; Fair innings; Health inequality aversion; Social preferences; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31650439 PMCID: PMC7072057 DOI: 10.1007/s10198-019-01126-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Health Econ ISSN: 1618-7598
Fig. 1PRISMA Flow Diagram
Identified studies—study characteristics
| Authors (date) | Sample size | Sample population | Administration method | Method | Focus of relevant questions within study |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ali et al. (2017) [ | 135 | York + UK | Group with individual response + online | BTO | Aversion to inequalities in YFH |
| Anand and Wailoo (2000) [ | 144 | Leicester | Postal | Simple choice | Relevance of cause of inequality |
| Baker et al. (2010) [ | 587 | England | CAPI | PTO | Social value of the QALY |
| Dolan and Tsuchiya (2005) [ | 100 | Sheffield | Group with individual response | Ranking | Relevance of past/future health |
| Dolan and Tsuchiya (2011) [ | 130 | York | Interview | BTO | Aversion to inequalities in LE |
| Edlin et al. (2012) [ | 559 | England + Wales | Interview | Other choice | Relevance of cause of inequality |
| Lancsar et al. (2011) [ | 587 | England | CAPI | DCE | Social value of the QALY |
| NICE (2006) [ | 26 | England + Wales | Group with individual response + Citizens Council | Simple choice | Prioritising the socially disadvantaged |
| Petrou et al. (2013) [ | 2500 | UK | Online | PTO + ranking | Fair innings |
| Rowen et al. (2016) [ | 371 | UK | Interview + online | Other choice | BOI |
| Rowen et al. (2016) [ | 3669 | UK | Online | DCE | BOI |
| Robson et al. (2017) [ | 244 | England | Online | BTO | Aversion to inequalities in YFH |
| Tsuchiya et al. (2003) [ | 140 | York | Interview | Ranking | Fair innings |
| Tsuchiya and Dolan (2007) [ | 271 | UK | Postal | BTO | Aversion to inequalities in LE |
| Tsuchiya and Dolan (2009) [ | 128 | Sheffield | Group with individual response | Ranking | Aversion to inequalities in LE |
BTO benefit trade-off, PTO person trade-off, DCE discrete choice experiment, CAPI computer-assisted personal interview, LE life expectancy at birth, YFH years of life in full health over the average person’s lifetime, BOI burden of illness
Identified studies—context
| Authors (date) | Tested inequality | Range of relevant inequality | Tested change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ali et al. (2017) [ | YFH | YFH: 62–74 | YFH |
| Anand and Wailoo (2000) [ | LE | LE: 70–84 | Priority |
| Baker et al. (2010) [ | LT QALYs (DC) | LT QALYs: < 76 | LT QALYs (DC) |
| Dolan and Tsuchiya (2005) [ | LT QALYs (DC) | LT QALYs: < 66 | LT QALYs (DC) |
| Dolan and Tsuchiya (2011)b [ | LE | LE: 73–78 | LE |
| Edlin et al. (2012) [ | LT QALYs (C + DC) | LT QALYs: 52–76 | LT QALYs (C + DC)a |
| Lancsar et al. (2011) [ | LT QALYs (DC) | LT QALYs: 60–80 | LT QALYs (DC) |
| NICE (2006) [ | General health | – | Priority |
| Petrou et al. (2013) [ | Age at death | Age at death: 60–90 | Extra years at full health |
| Rowen et al. (2016)c [ | BOI QALYs (DC) | Absolute QALY burden framed | QALYs (DC) |
| Rowen et al. (2016)c [ | BOI QALYs (DC) | Absolute QALY burden framed | QALYs (DC) |
| Robson et al. (2017) [ | YFH | YFH: 62–74 | YFH |
| Tsuchiya et al. (2003) [ | Age at death | Age: 55–70 | Age at death |
| Tsuchiya and Dolan (2007) [ | LE | LE: 73 vs 78 | LE |
| Tsuchiya and Dolan (2009) [ | LE | LE: 73 vs 78 | LE |
BOI burden of illness, LT lifetime, YFH years of life in full health over the average person’s lifetime, DC decomposed (QALY profile presented in terms of LE, and QoL, but not as a unified figure), C composed (QALY figure presented)
a[24] involves choices between different profiles, not changes in existing profiles, so this is technically not a “tested change”
bNote that [8] also tested aversion between the “healthiest” and “unhealthiest” quintiles of society, these labels are ambiguous and may be interpreted as reflecting the lifestyle of these groups, their lifestyle and their outcomes, or their outcomes alone. As a result, they were excluded
cNote that both Rowen et al. papers take a forward looking, rather than lifetime perspective—these studies are included under the assumption that BOI has a linear impact upon the preferences of the public (see “Eligibility criteria” for further detail)
Identified studies—summary of results
| Authors (date) | Choice context | Evidence of aversion to inequalities in lifetime health? | Atkinson ( | Weight placed on a marginal gain to group with lower lifetime healthe |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ali et al. (2017) [ | Socioeconomic groups | Yes | 10.87 or greater | 6.8–∞ |
| Anand and Wailoo (2000) [ | Socioeconomic groups | No | 1 (implied) | 1 |
| Baker et al. (2010) [ | Neutrally framed groups | Mixed | – | – |
| Dolan and Tsuchiya (2005) [ | Neutrally framed groups | Mixed | – | – |
| Dolan and Tsuchiya (2011) [ | Socioeconomic groups | Yes | 28.9 | 166.22 |
| Edlin et al. (2012) [ | Neutrally framed groups | Yes | 5.76–7.63 | 2.77–3.86 |
| Lancsar et al. (2011) [ | Neutrally framed groups | No | 1 (implied) | 1 |
| NICE (2006) [ | Socioeconomic groups | Mixed | – | – |
| Petrou et al. (2013) [ | Neutrally framed groups | Yes | > 1 (implied) | > 1 |
| Rowen et al. (2016) [ | Neutrally framed groups | Mixed | – | – |
| Rowen et al. (2016) [ | Neutrally framed groups | Mixed | – | – |
| Robson et al. (2017) [ | Socioeconomic groups | Yes | 10.95 | 6.95 |
| Tsuchiya et al. (2003) [ | Neutrally framed groups | Yes | > 1 (implied) | > 1 (implied) |
| Tsuchiya and Dolan (2007) [ | Socioeconomic groups | Yes | > 1 (implied) | > 1 (implied) |
| Tsuchiya and Dolan (2009) [ | Socioeconomic groups | Yes | > 1 (implied) | > 1 (implied) |
aAtkinson inequality aversion parameters are sometimes presented as “r” values, and sometimes presented as “ɛ” values. ɛ = r + 1
bEstimates derived based upon baseline inequality tested in [7] and [8]; 62 YFH vs 74 YFH. Atkinson inequality aversion parameters applied where possible—see [8]