Evaluating Utility Measures: Biases and Alternatives
Project Number5K02HS014010-04
Contact PI/Project LeaderWITTENBERG, EVE
Awardee OrganizationBRANDEIS UNIVERSITY
Description
Abstract Text
Cost-effectiveness and cost-utility analysis (CEA/CUA) is increasingly used for clinical and policy
decision making in health and medicine. Utilities are critical inputs to economic analyses, providing the
weighting factor for the common outcome measure "quality adjusted life years." The accuracy and validity of
measurement and application of utility measures are essential to producing meaningful and informative
results from such analyses. The proposed research will provide insight to understand the appropriate use
and application of existing utility measurement methods, and to guide the development of improvements and
alternatives. It will focus on cancer, a disease for which quality of life effects are of particular importance in
clinical decision making and policy.
The research proposes a series of studies to investigate the measurement of utilities, to explore the
application of utilities, and to develop guidelines for improvements in utility assessment methodology. The
first study will employ survey research and process tracing methods to identify cognitive factors that create
biases in utility assessment methods, and develop and test modifications to avoid such biases. The second
study will determine whether utilities vary systematically by individuals' age, race and gender using meta
analytic techniques. The research will culminate in recommendations for the use of existing utility
measurement methods and values, and the construction of a framework for the development of new
methods to value health. A useful by-product of the research will be estimates of utility values for cancer
health states for use by CEA/CUA and other applied researchers.
The candidate has studied preference and utility assessment methods and their application in her
dissertation, post-doctoral research, and current position as Instructor at Massachusetts General Hospital
and Harvard Medical School. She is beginning a career as a quality of life methodologist, focusing on
cancer interventions. This career development award would contribute to the initiation of her independent
research agenda. She will be guided in her career development by the Director of her department, the MGH
Institute for Technology Assessment, as well as senior researchers in this field who have established
working relationships with the candidate (including her dissertation and post-doctoral advisors). She has
strong institutional support and faculty mentorship to guarantee her success in the proposed research.
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