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Cross-national agreement on disability weights:the Eurpoean disability weights project

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journal contribution
posted on 2003-11-01, 00:00 authored by F Kamper-Jorgensen, U Christensen, K Moesgaard Iburg, J Raftery, C Packer, Lisa GoldLisa Gold, S Robinson, I Durand-Zaleski, M Schwarzinger, L Gunning-Schepers, G Bonsel, C Moerman, M Stouthard, P van der Maas, M L Essink-Bot, J Pereira, A Baylin, E Fernandez, F Diderichsen, K Burstrom, R Ljung
Background: Disability weights represent the relative severity of disease stages to be incorporated in summary measures of population health. The level of agreement on disability weights in Western European countries was investigated with different valuation methods.

Methods:
Disability weights for fifteen disease stages were elicited empirically in panels of health care professionals or non-health care professionals with an academic background following a strictly standardised procedure. Three valuation methods were used: a visual analogue scale (VAS); the time trade-off technique (TTO); and the person trade-off technique (PTO). Agreement among England, France, the Netherlands, Spain, and Sweden on the three disability weight sets was analysed by means of an intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) in the framework of generalisability theory. Agreement among the two types of panels was similarly assessed.

Results
: A total of 232 participants were included. Similar rankings of disease stages across countries were found with all valuation methods. The ICC of country agreement on disability weights ranged from 0.56 [95% CI, 0.52–0.62] with PTO to 0.72 [0.70–0.74] with VAS and 0.72 [0.69–0.75] with TTO. The ICC of agreement between health care professionals and non-health care professionals ranged from 0.64 [0.58–0.68] with PTO to 0.73 [0.71–0.75] with VAS and 0.74 [0.72–0.77] with TTO.

Conclusions
: Overall, the study supports a reasonably high level of agreement on disability weights in Western European countries with VAS and TTO methods, which focus on individual preferences, but a lower level of agreement with the PTO method, which focuses more on societal values in resource allocation.

History

Journal

Population Health Metrics

Volume

1

Issue

9

Pagination

1 - 9

Publisher

BioMed Central Ltd

Location

London, England

ISSN

1478-7954

Language

eng

Notes

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2003, BioMed Central Ltd

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