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Preference Elicitation Techniques Used in Valuing Children’s Health-Related Quality-of-Life: A Systematic Review

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Valuing children’s health states for use in economic evaluations is globally relevant and is of particular relevance in jurisdictions where a cost-utility analysis is the preferred form of analysis for decision making. Despite this, the challenges with valuing child health...

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Autores principales: Bailey, Cate, Howell, Martin, Raghunandan, Rakhee, Salisbury, Amber, Chen, Gang, Coast, Joanna, Craig, Jonathan C., Devlin, Nancy J., Huynh, Elisabeth, Lancsar, Emily, Mulhern, Brendan J., Norman, Richard, Petrou, Stavros, Ratcliffe, Julie, Street, Deborah J., Howard, Kirsten, Viney, Rosalie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer International Publishing 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9270310/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35619044
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40273-022-01149-3
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author Bailey, Cate
Howell, Martin
Raghunandan, Rakhee
Salisbury, Amber
Chen, Gang
Coast, Joanna
Craig, Jonathan C.
Devlin, Nancy J.
Huynh, Elisabeth
Lancsar, Emily
Mulhern, Brendan J.
Norman, Richard
Petrou, Stavros
Ratcliffe, Julie
Street, Deborah J.
Howard, Kirsten
Viney, Rosalie
author_facet Bailey, Cate
Howell, Martin
Raghunandan, Rakhee
Salisbury, Amber
Chen, Gang
Coast, Joanna
Craig, Jonathan C.
Devlin, Nancy J.
Huynh, Elisabeth
Lancsar, Emily
Mulhern, Brendan J.
Norman, Richard
Petrou, Stavros
Ratcliffe, Julie
Street, Deborah J.
Howard, Kirsten
Viney, Rosalie
author_sort Bailey, Cate
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Valuing children’s health states for use in economic evaluations is globally relevant and is of particular relevance in jurisdictions where a cost-utility analysis is the preferred form of analysis for decision making. Despite this, the challenges with valuing child health mean that there are many remaining questions for debate about the approach to elicitation of values. The aim of this paper was to identify and describe the methods used to value children’s health states and the specific issues that arise in the use of these methods. METHODS: We conducted a systematic search of electronic databases to identify studies published in English since 1990 that used preference elicitation methods to value child and adolescent (under 18 years of age) health states. Eligibility criteria comprised valuation studies concerning both child-specific patient-reported outcome measures and child health states defined in other ways, and methodological studies of valuation approaches that may or may not have yielded a value set algorithm. RESULTS: A total of 77 eligible studies were identified from which data on country setting, aims, condition (general population or clinically specific), sample size, age of respondents, the perspective that participants were asked to adopt, source of values (respondents who completed the preference elicitation tasks) and methods questions asked were extracted. Extracted data were classified and evaluated using narrative synthesis methods. The studies were classified into three groups: (1) studies comparing elicitation methods (n = 30); (2) studies comparing perspectives (n = 23); and (3) studies where no comparisons were presented (n = 26); selected studies could fall into more than one group. Overall, the studies varied considerably both in methods used and in reporting. The preference elicitation tasks included time trade-off, standard gamble, visual analogue scaling, rating/ranking, discrete choice experiments, best-worst scaling and willingness to pay elicited through a contingent valuation. Perspectives included adults’ considering the health states from their own perspective, adults taking the perspective of a child (own, other, hypothetical) and a child/adolescent taking their own or the perspective of another child. There was some evidence that children gave lower values for comparable health states than did adults that adopted their own perspective or adult/parents that adopted the perspective of children. CONCLUSIONS: Differences in reporting limited the conclusions that can be formed about which methods are most suitable for eliciting preferences for children’s health and the influence of differing perspectives and values. Difficulties encountered in drawing conclusions from the data (such as lack of consensus and poor reporting making it difficult for users to choose and interpret available values) suggest that reporting guidelines are required to improve the consistency and quality of reporting of studies that value children’s health using preference-based techniques. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s40273-022-01149-3.
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spelling pubmed-92703102022-07-10 Preference Elicitation Techniques Used in Valuing Children’s Health-Related Quality-of-Life: A Systematic Review Bailey, Cate Howell, Martin Raghunandan, Rakhee Salisbury, Amber Chen, Gang Coast, Joanna Craig, Jonathan C. Devlin, Nancy J. Huynh, Elisabeth Lancsar, Emily Mulhern, Brendan J. Norman, Richard Petrou, Stavros Ratcliffe, Julie Street, Deborah J. Howard, Kirsten Viney, Rosalie Pharmacoeconomics Systematic Review BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Valuing children’s health states for use in economic evaluations is globally relevant and is of particular relevance in jurisdictions where a cost-utility analysis is the preferred form of analysis for decision making. Despite this, the challenges with valuing child health mean that there are many remaining questions for debate about the approach to elicitation of values. The aim of this paper was to identify and describe the methods used to value children’s health states and the specific issues that arise in the use of these methods. METHODS: We conducted a systematic search of electronic databases to identify studies published in English since 1990 that used preference elicitation methods to value child and adolescent (under 18 years of age) health states. Eligibility criteria comprised valuation studies concerning both child-specific patient-reported outcome measures and child health states defined in other ways, and methodological studies of valuation approaches that may or may not have yielded a value set algorithm. RESULTS: A total of 77 eligible studies were identified from which data on country setting, aims, condition (general population or clinically specific), sample size, age of respondents, the perspective that participants were asked to adopt, source of values (respondents who completed the preference elicitation tasks) and methods questions asked were extracted. Extracted data were classified and evaluated using narrative synthesis methods. The studies were classified into three groups: (1) studies comparing elicitation methods (n = 30); (2) studies comparing perspectives (n = 23); and (3) studies where no comparisons were presented (n = 26); selected studies could fall into more than one group. Overall, the studies varied considerably both in methods used and in reporting. The preference elicitation tasks included time trade-off, standard gamble, visual analogue scaling, rating/ranking, discrete choice experiments, best-worst scaling and willingness to pay elicited through a contingent valuation. Perspectives included adults’ considering the health states from their own perspective, adults taking the perspective of a child (own, other, hypothetical) and a child/adolescent taking their own or the perspective of another child. There was some evidence that children gave lower values for comparable health states than did adults that adopted their own perspective or adult/parents that adopted the perspective of children. CONCLUSIONS: Differences in reporting limited the conclusions that can be formed about which methods are most suitable for eliciting preferences for children’s health and the influence of differing perspectives and values. Difficulties encountered in drawing conclusions from the data (such as lack of consensus and poor reporting making it difficult for users to choose and interpret available values) suggest that reporting guidelines are required to improve the consistency and quality of reporting of studies that value children’s health using preference-based techniques. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s40273-022-01149-3. Springer International Publishing 2022-05-27 2022 /pmc/articles/PMC9270310/ /pubmed/35619044 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40273-022-01149-3 Text en © The Author(s) 2022 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/Open AccessThis article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, which permits any non-commercial use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Systematic Review
Bailey, Cate
Howell, Martin
Raghunandan, Rakhee
Salisbury, Amber
Chen, Gang
Coast, Joanna
Craig, Jonathan C.
Devlin, Nancy J.
Huynh, Elisabeth
Lancsar, Emily
Mulhern, Brendan J.
Norman, Richard
Petrou, Stavros
Ratcliffe, Julie
Street, Deborah J.
Howard, Kirsten
Viney, Rosalie
Preference Elicitation Techniques Used in Valuing Children’s Health-Related Quality-of-Life: A Systematic Review
title Preference Elicitation Techniques Used in Valuing Children’s Health-Related Quality-of-Life: A Systematic Review
title_full Preference Elicitation Techniques Used in Valuing Children’s Health-Related Quality-of-Life: A Systematic Review
title_fullStr Preference Elicitation Techniques Used in Valuing Children’s Health-Related Quality-of-Life: A Systematic Review
title_full_unstemmed Preference Elicitation Techniques Used in Valuing Children’s Health-Related Quality-of-Life: A Systematic Review
title_short Preference Elicitation Techniques Used in Valuing Children’s Health-Related Quality-of-Life: A Systematic Review
title_sort preference elicitation techniques used in valuing children’s health-related quality-of-life: a systematic review
topic Systematic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9270310/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35619044
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40273-022-01149-3
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