Abstract
We estimate willingness to pay for small reductions in the risk of suffering nonfatal health conditions using a stated-preference survey fielded to an internet panel that is representative of the adult US population. Health conditions are described using a generic health utility system (EQ-5D). Estimated WTP is proportional to the stated reduction in probability of illness and independent of small differences in baseline risk, consistent with conventional economic theory, and is an increasing but highly concave function of the severity and duration of the illness. WTP to reduce nonfatal health risks can be estimated as a function of the severity and duration of the effect, but the relationship is not linear as assumed by the common practice of multiplying the expected QALY gain by a constant monetary value per QALY. WTP to reduce risk to another person in the household is significantly larger than to reduce risk to oneself, approximately 150 percent larger for an adult and 200 percent larger for a child.
Keywords
QALY; WTP; Morbidity; Stated-preference;
Reference
James K. Hammitt, and Kevin Haninger, “Valuing nonfatal health risk as a function of illness severity and duration: Benefit transfer using QALYs”, Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, vol. 82, March 2017, pp. 17–38.
Published in
Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, vol. 82, March 2017, pp. 17–38