Publication | Open Access
Risk preferences over health: Empirical estimates and implications for medical decision-making
30
Citations
75
References
2024
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingClinical Decision-makingChoice TheoryHealth OutcomeRiskbenefit RatioSocial Determinants Of HealthRisk PreferencesMedical Decision MakingBaseline HealthRisk ManagementRepresentative U.s. PopulationManagementEmpirical EstimatesPublic HealthDecision TheoryInsuranceHealth Services ResearchExpected GainHealth PolicyMedical Decision-makingHealth EquityEconomic EvaluationMedical Decision AnalysisHealthcare ValueBehavioral EconomicsHealth EconomicsHealth Care CostDecision Science
Mainstream health economic theory implies that an expected gain in health-related quality of life (HRQoL) produces the same value for consumers, regardless of baseline health. Several strands of recent research call this implication into question. Generalized Risk-Adjusted Cost-Effectiveness (GRACE) demonstrates theoretically that baseline health status influences value, so long as consumers are not risk-neutral over health. Prior empirical literature casts doubt on risk-neutral expected utility-maximization in the health domain. We estimate utility over HRQoL in a nationally representative U.S. population and use our estimates to measure risk preferences over health. We find that individuals are risk-seeking at low levels of health, become risk-averse at health equal to 0.485 (measured on a 0-1 scale), and are most risk-averse at perfect health (coefficient of relative risk aversion = 4.51). We develop the resulting implications for medical decision making, cost-effectiveness analyses, and the proper theory of health-related decision making under uncertainty.
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