## Abstract Procedural justice theory posits that the process by which disputes are resolved influences perceptions of fairness and satisfaction with outcomes, even if the outcomes are unfavorable. Within the context of civil commitment, Tyler (1992) has suggested that enhancing respondents' percep
TESTING PROCEDURAL INVARIANCE IN THE CONTEXT OF HEALTH
β Scribed by Adam Oliver
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2012
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 443 KB
- Volume
- 22
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1057-9230
- DOI
- 10.1002/hec.2796
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
ABSTRACT
Violations of procedural invariance, epitomised by βclassicβ preference reversals, have been observed for more than 40 years, and yet the study of this phenomenon in health remains nascent. This is an oversight because such violations pose a challenge to health economics, where choice and valuation methodologies often are used interchangeably. This article reports two experiments that aim to test for preference reversals over outcomes defined by health status, using both βopenβ and βassistedβ valuation procedures. Although systematic preference reversals in the direction generally reported in the literature were not observed, the rates of nonβsystematic reversal were substantial, measuring 35β40%. By analysing the respondentsβ explanations for their answers, it is clear that many of them used heuristics to answer the questions, and they may have good reasons to do so, which undermines the notion that preferences are always fixed and stable. These results, and others like it, pose a challenge to those who unquestioningly assume procedural invariance and maintain that population preferences should be used to inform health policy. Copyright Β© 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
A N EFFORT to improve results of treatment I in cervical cancer, attention has been directed to the study of radiosensitivity.12115~ 16 Two factors are largely responsible for this: (1) the relative lack of over-all improvement in therapeutic results during the last 2 decades, aside from that impro
## Abstract The TTOβmethod is often used to value health states, but it is susceptible to several biases and methodological difficulties. One of these is a violation of procedural invariance, which means that the way a TTOβquestion is framed, i.e. either by fixing the period in imperfect health or
In this paper the asymptotic Pitman efficiencies of the affine invariant multivariate analogues of the rank tests based on the generalized median of Oja are considered. Formulae for asymptotic relative efficiencies are found and, under multivariate normal and multivariate t distributions, relative e