Is anchoring at ‘dead’ a theoretical requirement for health state valuation?

Values that accompany generic health measures are typically anchored at 1 = full health and 0 = dead. Some health states may then be considered ‘worse than dead’ (WTD) and assigned negative values, which causes fundamental measurement problems. In this paper, we challenge the assumption that anchori...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health economics 2024-09, Vol.33 (9), p.1929-1935
Hauptverfasser: Sampson, Chris, Parkin, David, Devlin, Nancy
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container_issue 9
container_start_page 1929
container_title Health economics
container_volume 33
creator Sampson, Chris
Parkin, David
Devlin, Nancy
description Values that accompany generic health measures are typically anchored at 1 = full health and 0 = dead. Some health states may then be considered ‘worse than dead’ (WTD) and assigned negative values, which causes fundamental measurement problems. In this paper, we challenge the assumption that anchoring values at ‘dead = 0’ is necessary for quality‐adjusted life year (QALY) estimation. We summarise the role of ‘dead’ in health state valuation and consider three critical questions: (i) whether the measurement properties of health state values require ‘dead’; (ii) whether ‘dead’ needs to be valued relative to health states; and (iii) whether values for states WTD are meaningful or useful. We conclude that anchoring 0 at dead is not a requirement of health status measurement or cost‐effectiveness analysis. This results from reframing QALYs as the relevant unit of measurement and reframing values as being derived from QALYs rather than the reverse.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Wiley Online Library - AutoHoldings Journals; MEDLINE
subjects Clinical outcomes
Cost analysis
Cost-Benefit Analysis
dead
death
EQ‐5D
Frame analysis
health state valuation
Health Status
health‐related quality of life
Humans
Intervention
Measurement
Quality adjusted life years
Quality of Life
quality‐adjusted life year
stated preference
time trade‐off
TTO
utility
Valuation
title Is anchoring at ‘dead’ a theoretical requirement for health state valuation?
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