Applied Methods of Cost-benefit Analysis in Health Care
by McIntosh, Emma; Clarke, Philip; Frew, Emma J.; Louviere, Jordan J.-
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Summary
Author Biography
Dr Emma McIntosh joined the Health Economics Research Centre in August 2000. Emma has an MSc in Health Economics and a PhD in Economics. Prior to joining HERC Emma worked in the Health Economics Research Unit at the University of Aberdeen developing and applying stated preference discrete choice methods in health economics as well as carrying out economic evaluations alongside a number of trials in the areas of laparoscopic hernia repair and guidelines for urology. At HERC, Emma is working on a number of trials in Parkinson's Disease, stroke and home visiting as well as continuing her interest in developing the methodology of discrete choice experiments. Dr Emma Frew moved to Birmingham in March 2002, having previously worked at the University of Nottingham, where she obtained her PhD in health economics. Her research interests are broad but generally centre around methodological issues of outcome valuation, especially contingent valuation, and the use of economic tools within childhood populations. Emma has worked on various projects exploring the use of contingent valuation and has published widely in this area. As well as her work within contingent valuation, Emma is responsible for the health economics element of the West Midlands Research Design Service, leads the academic unit research theme in Cancer and has an interest in the development and changing trends of health economics teaching. Jordan Louviere was previously on the faculties of Sydney University, University of Utah, University of Alberta, University of Iowa, University of Wyoming and Florida State University. His current research projects include integration of structural equation and choice models, choice models for single persons, integration of basic science with choice models, the behavior of the error variance in latent dependent variable models, measurement models based on best-worst choices and theory and methods for valuing the equity of brands. He works with Australia, US and other firms on choice modeling applications. He is on the editorial boards of the Journal of Choice Modeling, and the International Journal of Research in Marketing. He is an OZ Reader for the Australian Research Council, and has received numerous research grants from NSF, SSHRC, ARC and other funding sources.
Table of Contents
| Contributors | p. xiii |
| Introduction | p. 1 |
| Methods for evaluating health and health care: Underlying theory and implications for practical application | p. 19 |
| Shadow pricing in health care cost-benefit analyses | p. 39 |
| Costing methodology for applied cost-benefit analysis in health care | p. 55 |
| Valuation and cost-benefit analysis in health and environmental economics | p. 79 |
| Benefit assessment for cost-benefit analysis studies in health care using contingent valuation methods | p. 97 |
| Benefit assessment for cost-benefit analysis studies in health care: A guide to carrying out a stated preference willingness to pay survey in health care | p. 119 |
| Applied cost-benefit analysis in health care: An empirical application in spinal surgery | p. 139 |
| Using revealed preference methods to value health care: The travel cost approach | p. 161 |
| Experimental design and the estimation of willingness to pay in choice experiments for health policy evaluation | p. 185 |
| Benefit assessment for cost-benefit analysis studies in health care using discrete choice experiments: Estimating welfare in a health care setting | p. 211 |
| A practical guide to reporting and presenting stated preference discrete choice experiment results in cost-benefit analysis studies in health care | p. 231 |
| The relevance of cost-benefit analysis in health care: Concluding comments | p. 259 |
| Index | p. 263 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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