19 February 2015

Implications of hypothetical decisions

Do respondents completing abstract, hypothetical priority-setting exercises agree with the policy implications of their choices?OHE, February 2015
  • Results of a survey designed to elicit data on people’s preferences regarding health care priority setting found that people’s stated preferences regarding hypothetical scenarios are influenced by the way in which the information is presented to them. They also show that people do not always agree with the policy implications of their responses to the stated preference tasks.
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