Login / Signup

Exploring the Issues of Valuing Child and Adolescent Health States Using a Mixed Sample of Adolescents and Adults.

Donna RowenClara MukuriaPhilip A PowellAllan Wailoo
Published in: PharmacoEconomics (2022)
Preferences for child and adolescent health states used to generate health state utility values can be elicited from adults, young adults, adolescents, or combinations of these. This commentary paper provides a critical overview of issues and implications arising from valuing child and adolescent health states using a novel approach of a mixed sample of adolescents and adults. The commentary is informed by critical analysis of normative, ethical, practical and theoretical arguments in the health state valuation literature. Discussion focusses upon adolescent empowerment, understanding and psychosocial maturity; ethical concerns; elicitation tasks; perspective; and selection of sample proportions across adolescents and adults. It is argued that valuation of child and adolescent health states by both adolescents and adults could involve all participants completing the same preference elicitation task using the same perspective (e.g. time trade-off imagining they are living in the health state), and all preferences being modelled to generate a combined value set that reflects both adolescent and adult preferences. It is concluded that the valuation of child and adolescent health states by a mixed adolescent and adult sample appears feasible and has the advantage that it includes some of the population who can potentially experience the health states, thus enabling adolescents to express their views around matters that may affect them, and the population that are taxpayers and voters. However, both the relative proportion of adults and adolescents to include in a valuation sample and the elicitation technique require careful consideration.
Keyphrases
  • young adults
  • mental health
  • public health
  • healthcare
  • childhood cancer
  • health information
  • physical activity
  • health promotion
  • systematic review
  • human health
  • decision making
  • risk assessment
  • climate change
  • social media