journal article

Developing an Australian Value Set for the Recovering Quality of Life-Utility Index Instrument Using Discrete Choice Experiment With Duration.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The Recovering Quality of Life-Utility Index (ReQoL-UI) instrument was designed to measure the quality-of-life outcomes for people older than 16 years with mental health problems. We aimed to elicit societal preferences for the ReQoL-UI health states to facilitate better decision making in Australia. METHODS: A discrete choice experiment with duration was embedded in a self-completed online survey and administered to a representative sample (n = 1019) of the Australian adult population aged 18 years and older stratified by age, sex, and geographic location. A partial subset design discrete choice experiment was used with 3 fixed attributes and 5 varying attributes, containing 240 choice tasks that were divided into 20 blocks so that each respondent was assigned a block of 12 choice tasks. The value set was modeled using the conditional logit model with utility decrements directly anchored on the 0 to 1 dead-full health scale. Preference heterogeneity was tested using a mixed logit model. RESULTS: The final value set reflects the monotonic nature of the ReQoL-UI descriptive systems where the best health state defined by the descriptive system has a value of 1 and the worst state has a value of -0.585. The most important dimension was physical health problems, whereas the least important attribute was self-perception. Sensitivity and preference heterogeneity analyses revealed the stability of the value set. CONCLUSIONS: The value set, which reflects the preferences of the Australian population, facilitates the calculation of an index for quality-adjusted life-years in mental health intervention cost-utility analyses

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