Stability of Stated Preferences: Vaccine Priority Setting before and during the First COVID-19 Lockdown.

IF 3.1 3区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Medical Decision Making Pub Date : 2023-05-01 DOI:10.1177/0272989X221150185
Jeroen Luyten, Roselinde Kessels
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Abstract

Background: Discrete choice experiments (DCEs) are frequently used to study preferences and quantify tradeoffs in decision making. It is important to understand how stable their results are.

Objective: To investigate to what extent an extreme change in context, the COVID-19 pandemic, affected preferences for vaccine priority setting, as observed in an earlier DCE.

Methods: We replicated a DCE in which participants had to prioritize vaccination programs for public funding. The initial DCE was executed in Flanders (Belgium) right before the onset of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic (December 2019, N = 1,636). The replicated DCE was executed 6 months later when the population was in lockdown (April 2020, N = 1,127). A total of 612 respondents participated in both waves of the DCE. We used panel mixed logit models to quantify attribute and level importance and compared utility estimates for consistency.

Results: The number of vaccine-preventable deaths became less important during the pandemic than before, whereas the influential attributes, the vaccine's contribution to disease eradication and certainty about vaccine effectiveness became even more important. Respondents attached equal importance to the number of patients with transient or permanent morbidity, to the disease's economic impact as well as to its equity profile.

Conclusion: Different preferences for vaccine priority setting were observed during the first COVID-19 lockdown as compared with before, although these differences were, given the extreme nature of the changing circumstances, relatively small.

Highlights: We replicated a discrete choice experiment (DCE) about vaccine priority setting during the first COVID-19 lockdown and compared results with those from the original setting.The major attributes, contribution to disease eradication, and scientific certainty about vaccine effectiveness became even more important than they already were, whereas avoidable mortality became less important.Respondents attached equal importance to the number of patients with transient or permanent morbidity, to the disease's economic impact as well as to its equity profile.An extreme change in directly related context to the choice assignment led to changes in stated preferences, although these changes were relatively small, given the extreme change in context.Priorities in the second DCE were even less aligned with cost-effectiveness analysis than those observed initially.

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既定偏好的稳定性:第一次COVID-19封锁之前和期间的疫苗优先级设置。
背景:离散选择实验(DCEs)经常被用来研究偏好和量化决策中的权衡。了解它们的结果有多稳定是很重要的。目的:调查在早期的DCE中观察到的背景极端变化,即COVID-19大流行,在多大程度上影响了对疫苗优先设置的偏好。方法:我们复制了一个DCE,参与者必须优先考虑公共资金的疫苗接种计划。最初的DCE是在法兰德斯(比利时)执行的,就在SARS-CoV-2大流行开始之前(2019年12月,N = 1636)。6个月后,当人口处于封锁状态时(2020年4月,N = 1127),执行了复制的DCE。共有612名受访者参加了两轮DCE。我们使用面板混合logit模型来量化属性和水平的重要性,并比较效用估计的一致性。结果:疫苗可预防的死亡人数在大流行期间变得不那么重要,而影响属性、疫苗对疾病根除的贡献和疫苗有效性的确定性变得更加重要。答复者同样重视短暂或永久发病的患者人数、疾病的经济影响及其公平性。结论:与之前相比,在第一次COVID-19封锁期间,人们对疫苗优先级设置的偏好有所不同,尽管考虑到环境变化的极端性质,这些差异相对较小。重点:我们重复了一项关于COVID-19首次封锁期间疫苗优先级设置的离散选择实验(DCE),并将结果与原始设置的结果进行了比较。主要属性,对疾病根除的贡献,以及疫苗有效性的科学确定性变得比以前更加重要,而可避免的死亡率变得不那么重要了。答复者同样重视短暂或永久发病的患者人数、疾病的经济影响及其公平性。与选择任务直接相关的环境的极端变化导致陈述偏好的变化,尽管这些变化相对较小,考虑到环境的极端变化。与最初观察到的相比,第二次DCE的优先事项更不符合成本效益分析。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Medical Decision Making
Medical Decision Making 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
5.60%
发文量
146
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Medical Decision Making offers rigorous and systematic approaches to decision making that are designed to improve the health and clinical care of individuals and to assist with health care policy development. Using the fundamentals of decision analysis and theory, economic evaluation, and evidence based quality assessment, Medical Decision Making presents both theoretical and practical statistical and modeling techniques and methods from a variety of disciplines.
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