Eliciting consumer preferences for health plans

被引:1
|
作者
Booske, BC [1 ]
Sainfort, F [1 ]
Hundt, AS [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Wisconsin, Ctr Hlth Syst Res & Anal, Madison, WI 53705 USA
关键词
health plan choice; consumer information; preferences; decision making;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Objective. To examine (1) what people say is important to them in choosing a health plan; (2) the effect, if any, that giving health plan information has on what people say is important to them; and (3) the effect of preference elicitation methods on what people say is important. Data Sources/Study Settings. A random sample of 201 Wisconsin state employees who participated in a health plan choice experiment during the 1995 open enrollment period. Study Design. We designed a computer system to guide subjects through the review of information about health plan options. The system began by eliciting the stated preferences of the subjects before they viewed the information, at time 0. Subjects were given an opportunity to revise their preference structures first after viewing summary information about four health plans (time 1) and then after viewing more extensive, detailed information about the same options (time 2). At time 2, these individuals were also asked to rate the relative importance of a predefined list of health plan features presented to them. Data Collection/Extraction Methods. Data were collected on the number of attributes listed at each point in time and the importance weightings assigned to each attribute. In addition, each item on the attribute list was content analyzed. Principal Finding. The provision of information changes the preference structures of individuals. Costs (price) and coverage dominated the attributes cited both before and after looking at health plan information. When presented with information on costs, quality, and how plans work, many of these relatively well educated consumers revised their preference structures; yet coverage and costs remained the primary cited attributes. Conclusions. Although efforts to provide health plan information should continue, decisions on the information to provide and on making it available are not enough. Individuals need help in understanding, processing, and using the information to construct their preferences and make better decisions.
引用
收藏
页码:839 / 854
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Eliciting women's preferences in health care: A review of the literature
    Sampietro-Colom, L
    Phillips, VL
    Hutchinson, AB
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENT IN HEALTH CARE, 2004, 20 (02) : 145 - 155
  • [2] Eliciting preferences for social health insurance in Ethiopia: a discrete choice experiment
    Obse, Amarech
    Ryan, Mandy
    Heidenreich, Sebastian
    Normand, Charles
    Hailemariam, Damen
    HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING, 2016, 31 (10) : 1423 - 1432
  • [3] Eliciting Preferences for Health Insurance in Iran Using Discrete Choice Experiment Analysis
    Karyani, Ali Kazemi
    Sari, Ali Akbari
    Woldemichael, Abraha
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTH POLICY AND MANAGEMENT, 2019, 8 (08) : 488 - 497
  • [4] The Formation of Consumer Brand Preferences
    Bronnenberg, Bart J.
    Dube, Jean-Pierre
    ANNUAL REVIEW OF ECONOMICS, VOL 9, 2017, 9 : 353 - 382
  • [5] A satisficing approach to eliciting risk preferences
    Berg, Nathan
    Prakhya, Srinivas
    Ranganathan, Kavitha
    JOURNAL OF BUSINESS RESEARCH, 2018, 82 : 127 - 140
  • [6] Eliciting patients' preferences for epilepsy diagnostics: A discrete choice experiment
    Wijnen, B. F. M.
    de Kinderen, R. J. A.
    Colon, A. J.
    Dirksen, C. D.
    Essers, B. A. B.
    Hiligsmann, M.
    Leijten, F. S. S.
    Ossenblok, P. P. W.
    Evers, S. M. A. A.
    EPILEPSY & BEHAVIOR, 2014, 31 : 102 - 109
  • [7] Testing the feasibility of eliciting preferences for health states from adolescents using direct methods
    Crump, R. Trafford
    Lau, Ryan
    Cox, Elizabeth
    Currie, Gillian
    Panepinto, Julie
    BMC PEDIATRICS, 2018, 18
  • [8] Testing the feasibility of eliciting preferences for health states from adolescents using direct methods
    R. Trafford Crump
    Ryan Lau
    Elizabeth Cox
    Gillian Currie
    Julie Panepinto
    BMC Pediatrics, 18
  • [9] A HIERARCHICAL MULTIPLE CRITERIA MODEL FOR ELICITING RELATIVE PREFERENCES IN CONFLICT SITUATIONS
    Ke, Ginger Y.
    Fu, Bing
    De, Mitali
    Hipel, Keith W.
    JOURNAL OF SYSTEMS SCIENCE AND SYSTEMS ENGINEERING, 2012, 21 (01) : 56 - 76
  • [10] Eliciting preferences on secondary findings: the Preferences Instrument for Genomic Secondary Results
    Brothers, Kyle B.
    East, Kelly M.
    Kelley, Whitley V.
    Wright, M. Frances
    Westbrook, Matthew J.
    Rich, Carla A.
    Bowling, Kevin M.
    Lose, Edward J.
    Bebin, E. Martina
    Simmons, Shirley
    Myers, John A.
    Barsh, Greg
    Myers, Richard M.
    Cooper, Greg M.
    Pulley, Jill M.
    Rothstein, Mark A.
    Clayton, Ellen Wright
    GENETICS IN MEDICINE, 2017, 19 (03) : 337 - 344