长寿还是高质量的死亡?英国生命末期护理不同方面相对重要性的离散选择实验》。

IF 1.9 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
MDM Policy and Practice Pub Date : 2024-05-15 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1177/23814683241252425
Chris Skedgel, David John Mott, Saif Elayan, Angela Cramb
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景。倡导者认为,生命末期护理在质量调整生命年(QALY)框架中处于不利地位。顾名思义,临终关怀持续时间短,主要目的不是延长生存期;因此,对时间要素进行估值可能并不合适。QALY 还忽略了尊严、控制和家庭关系等非健康因素,而这些因素在临终关怀中可能更为重要。总之,这些因素表明 QALY 可能是衡量临终关怀价值的一个有缺陷的标准。为了验证这些论点,我们对英国具有代表性的公众样本进行了陈述偏好调查。调查方法我们设计了一个离散选择实验 (DCE),以了解公众对不同临终关怀方案的偏好,重点关注生存、传统健康维度(尤其是身体症状和焦虑)以及家庭关系、尊严和控制感等非健康维度的相对重要性。我们使用潜类分析来了解偏好的异质性。研究结果四类潜类多项式逻辑模型的拟合度最高,并显示出重要的异质性。一小部分受访者强烈优先考虑生存,而大多数受访者对生存的重视程度相对较低,一般来说,优先考虑非健康方面。结论。该 DCE 表明,英国受访者的偏好存在重大差异。尽管受访者对 QALY 的核心要素有一些偏好,但我们认为大多数受访者更倾向于所谓的 "好的死亡",而不是最大限度地提高存活率,并且发现受访者倾向于优先考虑非健康方面,而不是传统的健康质量方面。总之,这似乎支持了 QALY 不能很好地衡量临终关怀价值的观点。我们建议在评估临终关怀和其他干预措施时,从与健康相关的生活质量转向更全面的福祉视角:倡导者认为,包括但不限于临终关怀在内的一些干预措施受到了患者和公众的重视,但在质量调整生命年(QALY)框架下,这些干预措施却处于系统性的不利地位,从而导致医疗资源分配的不公平和低效率。只有一小部分公众受访者将临终关怀情景中的生存放在首位,而大多数人则将尊严和家庭关系等非健康方面放在首位。这些结果表明,质量调整生命年可能是衡量临终关怀价值的一个糟糕标准,因为它忽视了质量和幸福等非健康方面,而这些方面在假设的临终关怀情景中似乎对人们很重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Longer Life or a Quality Death? A Discrete Choice Experiment to Estimate the Relative Importance of Different Aspects of End-of-Life Care in the United Kingdom.

Background. Advocates argue that end-of-life (EOL) care is systematically disadvantaged by the quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) framework. By definition, EOL care is short duration and not primarily intended to extend survival; therefore, it may be inappropriate to value a time element. The QALY also neglects nonhealth dimensions such as dignity, control, and family relations, which may be more important at EOL. Together, these suggest the QALY may be a flawed measure of the value of EOL care. To test these arguments, we administered a stated preference survey in a UK-representative public sample. Methods. We designed a discrete choice experiment (DCE) to understand public preferences over different EOL scenarios, focusing on the relative importance of survival, conventional health dimensions (especially physical symptoms and anxiety), and nonhealth dimensions such as family relations, dignity, and sense of control. We used latent class analysis to understand preference heterogeneity. Results. A 4-class latent class multinomial logit model had the best fit and illustrated important heterogeneity. A small class of respondents strongly prioritized survival, whereas most respondents gave relatively little weight to survival and, generally speaking, prioritized nonhealth aspects. Conclusions. This DCE illustrates important heterogeneity in preferences within UK respondents. Despite some preferences for core elements of the QALY, we suggest that most respondents favored what has been called "a good death" over maximizing survival and find that respondents tended to prioritize nonhealth over conventional health aspects of quality. Together, this appears to support arguments that the QALY is a poor measure of the value of EOL care. We recommend moving away from health-related quality of life and toward a more holistic perspective on well-being in assessing EOL and other interventions.

Highlights: Advocates argue that some interventions, including but not limited to end-of-life (EOL) care, are valued by patients and the public but are systematically disadvantaged by the quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) framework, leading to an unfair and inefficient allocation of health care resources.Using a discrete choice experiment, we find some support for this argument. Only a small proportion of public respondents prioritized survival in EOL scenarios, and most prioritized nonhealth aspects such as dignity and family relations.Together, these results suggest that the QALY may be a poor measure of the value of EOL care, as it neglects nonhealth aspects of quality and well-being that appear to be important to people in hypothetical EOL scenarios.

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MDM Policy and Practice
MDM Policy and Practice Medicine-Health Policy
CiteScore
2.50
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15 weeks
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