Preferences for COVID-19 epidemic control measures among French adults: a discrete choice experiment

被引:0
作者
Jonathan Sicsic
Serge Blondel
Sandra Chyderiotis
François Langot
Judith E. Mueller
机构
[1] Université Paris Cité,EHESP French School of Public Health
[2] LIRAES F-75006,undefined
[3] Université d’Angers,undefined
[4] GRANEM,undefined
[5] SFR Confluences,undefined
[6] Institut Pasteur,undefined
[7] Le Mans Université (GAINS-TEPP and IRA),undefined
[8] IUF,undefined
[9] PSE,undefined
[10] Cepremap,undefined
[11] IZA,undefined
[12] Rennes and Institut Pasteur,undefined
来源
The European Journal of Health Economics | 2023年 / 24卷
关键词
SARS-CoV-2 epidemic; COVID-19; Epidemic control measures; Preferences; Discrete choice experiment; Correlated mixed logit model; Choice certainty; C91; I12; I18;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
In this stated preferences study, we describe for the first time French citizens’ preferences for various epidemic control measures, to inform longer-term strategies and future epidemics. We used a discrete choice experiment in a representative sample of 908 adults in November 2020 (before vaccination was available) to quantify the trade-off they were willing to make between restrictions on the social, cultural, and economic life, school closing, targeted lockdown of high-incidence areas, constraints to directly protect vulnerable persons (e.g., self-isolation), and measures to overcome the risk of hospital overload. The estimation of mixed logit models with correlated random effects shows that some trade-offs exist to avoid overload of hospitals and intensive care units, at the expense of stricter control measures with the potential to reduce individuals’ welfare. The willingness to accept restrictions was shared to a large extent across subgroups according to age, gender, education, vulnerability to the COVID-19 epidemic, and other socio-demographic or economic variables. However, individuals who felt at greater risk from COVID-19, and individuals expressing high confidence in the governmental management of the health and economic crisis, more easily accepted all these restrictions. Finally, we compared the welfare impact of alternative strategies combining different epidemic control measures. Our results suggest that policies close to a targeted lockdown or with medically prescribed self-isolation were those satisfying the largest share of the population and achieving high gain in average welfare, while average welfare was maximized by the combination of all highly restrictive measures. This illustrates the difficulty in making preference-based decisions on restrictions.
引用
收藏
页码:81 / 98
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
[31]   Attribute nonattendance in COVID-19 vaccine choice: A discrete choice experiment based on Chinese public preference [J].
Xiao, Jianhong ;
Wang, Fei ;
Wang, Min ;
Ma, Zegang .
HEALTH EXPECTATIONS, 2022, 25 (03) :959-970
[32]   Which factors drive the choice of the French-speaking Quebec population towards a COVID-19 vaccination programme: A discrete-choice experiment [J].
Morillon, Gabin F. ;
Poder, Thomas G. .
HEALTH EXPECTATIONS, 2024, 27 (01)
[33]   Patient preferences for preventive migraine treatments among Canadian adults: A discrete choice experiment [J].
Bougie, Joanna K. ;
Krupsky, Kathryn ;
Beusterien, Kathleen ;
Ladouceur, Marie-Pier ;
Mulvihill, Emily .
HEADACHE, 2025, 65 (01) :113-123
[34]   Analysis of preference for COVID-19 measures at hotels: a choice experiment in Japan [J].
Chen, Kaifan ;
Nakano, Makiko .
APPLIED ECONOMICS, 2024,
[35]   Preferences for Attributes of Initial COVID-19 Diagnosis in the United States and China During the Pandemic: Discrete Choice Experiment With Propensity Score Matching [J].
Zhang, Yimin ;
Liu, Taoran ;
He, Zonglin ;
Chan, Sze Ngai ;
Akinwunmi, Babatunde ;
Huang, Jian ;
Wong, Tak-Hap ;
Zhang, Casper J. P. ;
Ming, Wai-Kit .
JMIR PUBLIC HEALTH AND SURVEILLANCE, 2022, 8 (08)
[36]   Factors influencing individual vaccine preferences for COVID-19 in the Sunyani Municipality, Ghana: An observational study using discrete choice experiment analysis [J].
Gyasi, Samuel Fosu ;
Kumi, Williams ;
Kwofie, Charles .
HEALTH SCIENCE REPORTS, 2024, 7 (07)
[37]   Influence of Vaccination Characteristics on COVID-19 Vaccine Acceptance Among Working-Age People in Hong Kong, China: A Discrete Choice Experiment [J].
Wang, Kailu ;
Wong, Eliza Lai-Yi ;
Cheung, Annie Wai-Ling ;
Yau, Peter Sen-Yung ;
Chung, Vincent Chi-Ho ;
Wong, Charlene Hoi-Lam ;
Dong, Dong ;
Wong, Samuel Yeung-Shan ;
Yeoh, Eng-Kiong .
FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH, 2021, 9
[38]   COVID-19 Contact Tracing Apps: Predicted Uptake in the Netherlands Based on a Discrete Choice Experiment [J].
Jonker, Marcel ;
de Bekker-Grob, Esther ;
Veldwijk, Jorien ;
Goossens, Lucas ;
Bour, Sterre ;
Rutten-Van Molken, Maureen .
JMIR MHEALTH AND UHEALTH, 2020, 8 (10)
[39]   Preferences for Primary Healthcare Services Among Older Adults with Chronic Disease: A Discrete Choice Experiment [J].
Peng, Yingying ;
Jiang, Mingzhu ;
Shen, Xiao ;
Li, Xianglin ;
Jia, Erping ;
Xiong, Juyang .
PATIENT PREFERENCE AND ADHERENCE, 2020, 14 :1625-1637
[40]   Effects of policies and containment measures on control of COVID-19 epidemic in Chongqing [J].
Liang, Xiao-Hua ;
Tang, Xian ;
Luo, Ye-Tao ;
Zhang, Min ;
Feng, Ze-Pei .
WORLD JOURNAL OF CLINICAL CASES, 2020, 8 (14) :2959-2976