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Willingness to Pay for Health

2014
The valuation of health in monetary terms can be estimated by observing real choices or by eliciting willingness to pay (WTP) through presentation of hypothetical choices to respondents (contingent valuation). Contingent valuation is commonly used in other areas of the public sector and its use is growing in health. In this article, the authors outline
Baker R   +3 more
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Willingness to pay for a QALY

Health Economics, 2003
Abstract A willingness to pay (WTP) per quality‐adjusted‐life year (QALY) of DKK 88 was estimated on the basis of elicited preferences for health states. The WTP per QALY estimate presented here differs considerably from that implied in contingent valuation studies, suggesting that WTP for reducing risk of death ...
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Willingness To Pay

PharmacoEconomics, 1998
Despite renewed enthusiasm for the use of willingness to pay (WTP) in healthcare applications, there are still a lot of objections, resentment and scepticism regarding the desirability and feasibility of this technique. Objections can be classified into different categories: e.g.
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FRAMING THE WILLINGNESS‐TO‐PAY QUESTION: IMPACT ON RESPONSE PATTERNS AND MEAN WILLINGNESS TO PAY

Health Economics, 2013
SUMMARYIn this study, respondents were randomly allocated to three variants of the payment card format and an open‐ended format in order to test for convergent validity. The aim was to test whether preferences (as measured by willingness to pay additional tax) would be affected by framing the willingness‐to‐pay question differently.
Gyrd-Hansen, Dorte   +2 more
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Willingness to Pay for Cancer Prevention

PharmacoEconomics, 2009
Cancer inflicts great pain, burden and cost upon American society, and preventing cancer is important but not costless. The aim of this review was to explore the upper limits that American society is paying and appears willing to pay to prevent cancer, by enforced environmental regulations and implemented clinical practice guidelines.
Timothy L. Hunt   +3 more
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Willingness to pay for obesity prevention

Economics & Human Biology, 2011
The purpose of this paper is to estimate consumers' willingness to pay (WTP) and investigate factors that affect participation in therapy to reduce weight or prevent obesity. As for the decision to participate in obesity prevention therapy, the results show that the price charged for therapy is the key factor. Furthermore, the gender, education, income,
Tsu-Tan, Fu   +2 more
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WILLINGNESS TO PAY FOR OBESITY TREATMENT

International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care, 2000
Objectives: To estimate willingness to pay (WTP) for effective treatment in a sample of obese individuals and to examine whether WTP is associated with factors reflecting the severity of obesity as well as a number of other variables such as age, sex, education, and income.Methods: WTP and data on the severity of obesity were collected from the ...
K, Narbro, L, Sjöström
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Willingness-to-pay

1993
Bernie J. O'Brien, Jose Luis Viramontes. --
O'Brien, Bernie J.   +2 more
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Overestimating Others’ Willingness to Pay

Journal of Consumer Research, 2012
This article documents a widespread bias: a tendency to overestimate how much others will pay for goods. The effect may influence pricing and negotiations, which depend on accurate assessments of others’ valuations. It is also shown to underlie or interact with several widely researched behavioral phenomena, including egocentric empathy gaps, the ...
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Information and the Divergence between Willingness to Accept and Willingness to Pay

Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 1999
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
Kolstad, Charles D., Guzman, Rolando M.
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