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. 2017 Apr 29;35(8):793–804. doi: 10.1007/s40273-017-0511-7

Table 2.

Recent preference studies relating to severity and end of lifea

Author Year Sample size Method Perspective Preference for severity? Preference for end of life?
Chim et al. [21] 2017 3080 Choice Personal, ex ante Majority prefer to allocate money to severe rather than moderate; shifts towards moderate under effectiveness trade-off Majority prefer to allocate equally, particularly under effectiveness trade-off
Kolasa and Lewandowski [54] 2015 97 PTO Societal decision maker, ex ante Heterogeneity: young prioritised on severity and capacity to benefit, but older people not prepared to trade off
Luyten et al. [52] 2015 750 DCE What should be funded by government Severity is significant in driving choice but less than patient characteristics and treatment effectiveness. Heterogeneity: preferences differ with respondent characteristics
Richardson et al. [51] 2016 662 Relative social WTP Societal decision maker, ex ante Supports a severity effect, with a threshold; weighting varies with the condition’s description
Rowen et al. [45] 2016 3669 DCE Which group the NHS should treat Some effect of BOI but inconsistent (Preference for end-of-life conditionsb)
Shiroiwa et al. [53] 2016 1000 Choice Societal decision maker, ex ante Similar proportion preferred severe and equal sharing
1000 DCE Societal decision maker, ex ante Preference for young, treatment over prevention, and severity
Skedgel et al. [46] 2015 656 DCE Societal decision maker, ex ante Aversion to poor final health state.
Heterogeneity: two latent classes differ in preferences over initial health state
Aversion to short initial life expectancy
Skedgel et al. [47] 2015 604 DCE and CSPC Societal decision maker, ex ante Preference for lower initial utility No preference over untreated life expectancy in DCE, preference for longer life expectancy in CSPC
Skedgel [48] 2016 1318 DCE and CSPC Societal decision maker, ex ante Preference for prioritising severe initial health status; aversion to prioritising good initial and poorer final health status No preference over untreated life expectancy
van de Wetering et al. [49] 2015 1205 DCE Societal decision maker Higher proportional shortfall not preferred in total sample. Heterogeneity: one of three latent classes showed preference to treat patients with low remaining health
van de Wetering et al. [50] 2016 1001 DCE Societal decision maker Severity shows some preference but unstable to adding in other parameters
van Exel et al. [44] 2015 294 Q-sort How healthcare decisions should be made Five viewpoints, one of which is severity and health maximising Five viewpoints, one of which is life preservation
Wouters et al. [57] 2017 46 Q-sort Personal, ex ante Three viewpoints, none of which support preference for health gains in terminally ill patients

DCE discrete-choice experiment, CSPC constant sum paired comparison, BOI burden of illness, NHS National Health Service, WTP willingness to pay, PTO Person Trade-Off

a Studies on severity and end of life published since the reviews of Gu et al. [15] and Chamberlain [55]

b The study by Rowen et al. [45] is included in the Chamberlain end-of-life review (although listed as the earlier draft of Brazier et al. [75]) and is therefore not discussed in this article