Abstract

BackgroundThe clients’ willingness to accept (WTA) and willingness to pay (WTP) for a given good or service can help elicit the monetary value of that good or service. This study aims to assess the WTA and WTP of mothers attending primary health centers for vaccines to their children during 2019 in Kermanshah city, western Iran.MethodsWe conducted a cross-sectional study on a total of 667 mothers attending primary health centers for vaccines to their children aged two to 18 months. A multistage sampling technique was employed to involve the mothers in the study, and data were collected using a self-administrated open-ended questionnaire. The multivariate linear regression model was used to identify the factors associated with the mothers’ WTP and WTA for vaccines to their children.ResultsThe study indicated that 94.2 and 93.1% of the mothers respectively had WTA and WTP values greater than zero, with their corresponding mean values of US$ 6.8 and US$ 4.4. The mothers in the higher monthly household income category, mothers born in the urban areas, and being a female child showed statistically significant positive associations with the mothers’ WTA for the vaccines. While there was a statistically significant positive relationship between monthly household income and the mothers’ WTP; a statistically significant negative relationship exists between the mothers’ age and their WTP for the vaccine to their children.ConclusionsThe findings indicated the mothers’ WTA to WTP ratio of greater than one for the vaccines to their children. The most important factor associated with the mothers’ WTA and WTP was the monthly household income. Thus, improving the socio-economic standards of women in the study area might contribute to reinforcing their immunization services seeking behavior to their children.

Highlights

  • The clients’ willingness to accept (WTA) and willingness to pay (WTP) for a given good or service can help elicit the monetary value of that good or service

  • The disparity between the WTA and WTP is a well-established measure in behavioral economics or welfare economics [9, 10] and is replicable, universal, and persistently occurring even in participants that have an understanding of the elicitation procedure [11]

  • 628 (94.2%) mothers had the WTA values of greater than zero, while 39 (5.8%) mothers had the WTA values of zero

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Summary

Introduction

The clients’ willingness to accept (WTA) and willingness to pay (WTP) for a given good or service can help elicit the monetary value of that good or service. The WTA and WTP measures are helpful to assess the within-subject disparity on a given attribute [8]. The disparity between the WTA and WTP is a well-established measure in behavioral economics or welfare economics [9, 10] and is replicable, universal, and persistently occurring even in participants that have an understanding of the elicitation procedure [11]. The higher value individuals attach to objects they own (WTA) than to objects they do not (WTP) is another source of the disparity [9]. The behaviors of individuals, such as loss aversion, that affect the WTP can increase the gap. The gap can be turned on and off and can be a source of problematic interpretation [16]

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