Abstract
For optimal solutions in health care, decision makers inevitably must evaluate trade-offs, which call for multi-attribute valuation methods. Researchers have proposed using best-worst scaling (BWS) methods which seek to extract information from respondents by asking them to identify the best and worst items in each choice set. While a companion paper describes the different types of BWS, application and their advantages and downsides, this contribution expounds their relationships with microeconomic theory, which also have implications for statistical inference. This article devotes to the microeconomic foundations of preference measurement, also addressing issues such as scale invariance and scale heterogeneity. Furthermore the paper discusses the basics of preference measurement using rating, ranking and stated choice data in the light of the findings of the preceding section. Moreover the paper gives an introduction to the use of stated choice data and juxtaposes BWS with the microeconomic foundations.
Highlights
When searching for optimal solutions in health care, decision makers inevitably must evaluate trade-offs, which call for multi-attribute valuation methods [1]
Microeconomic foundations The objective of this section is to discuss concepts that are at the core of microeconomic theory but may be unfamiliar to readers with a health sciences background
While object case best-worst scaling (BWS) and profile case BWS have been found to have weakness, multiprofile case BWS is in accordance with microeconomic theory
Summary
When searching for optimal solutions in health care, decision makers inevitably must evaluate trade-offs, which call for multi-attribute valuation methods [1]. DCEs decompose choice alternatives into specific attributes or outcomes, permitting to identify the implicit decision weights survey respondents employ in making choices among combinations of health and healthcare outcomes [7, 8]. Microeconomic foundations The objective of this section is to discuss concepts that are at the core of microeconomic theory but may be unfamiliar to readers with a health sciences background.
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