Do socio-demographic characteristics and/or health status explain the magnitude of differences between patient and general public utility values? A chronic low back pain patients case study

Abstract Background Utility values can be obtained from different respondent groups, including patients and members of the general public. Evidence suggests that patient values are typically higher than general public values. This study explores whether the magnitude of disagreement between both val...

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Main Authors: J. M. van Dongen, M. L. van Hooff, A. P. Finch, M. W. van Tulder, J. E. Bosmans, R. W. J. G. Ostelo, M. de Kleuver
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-11-01
Series:Health and Quality of Life Outcomes
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12955-019-1240-8
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spelling doaj-30b5aadf490a4b3eabee35d072d757612020-11-25T03:59:07ZengBMCHealth and Quality of Life Outcomes1477-75252019-11-011711810.1186/s12955-019-1240-8Do socio-demographic characteristics and/or health status explain the magnitude of differences between patient and general public utility values? A chronic low back pain patients case studyJ. M. van Dongen0M. L. van Hooff1A. P. Finch2M. W. van Tulder3J. E. Bosmans4R. W. J. G. Ostelo5M. de Kleuver6Department of Health Sciences, Faculty of Science, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam Public Health Research InstituteSint Maartenskliniek, Department of ResearchDepartment of Health Sciences, Faculty of Science, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam Public Health Research InstituteDepartment of Health Sciences, Faculty of Science, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam Public Health Research InstituteDepartment of Health Sciences, Faculty of Science, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam Public Health Research InstituteDepartment of Health Sciences, Faculty of Science, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam Public Health Research InstituteDepartment of Orthopedic Surgery, Radboud University Medical CenterAbstract Background Utility values can be obtained from different respondent groups, including patients and members of the general public. Evidence suggests that patient values are typically higher than general public values. This study explores whether the magnitude of disagreement between both values can be explained by socio-demographic characteristics and/or health status. Methods Data of 5037 chronic low back pain patients were used. Self-reported EQ-VAS was employed as a proxy of patients’ preference for their own health state. General public values for the patients’ EQ-5D-3L health states were obtained using the Dutch VAS-based tariff. The difference between patient and general public values was assessed using a paired t-test. Subsequently, this difference was used as a dependent variable and regressed upon dummy variables of socio-demographic and health status characteristics. Coefficients represented age, gender, education level, social support, back pain intensity, leg pain intensity, functional status, comorbidities, catastrophizing, and treatment expectations. Results Patient values were higher than general public values (0.069; 95%CI:0.063–0.076). The magnitude of disagreement between both values was associated with age, gender, education level, social support, functional status, and comorbidities, but not with back pain intensity, leg pain intensity, catastrophizing, and treatment expectations. Conclusions Patients were found to value their own health status higher than members of the general public. The magnitude of disagreement between both values was found to differ by various socio-demographic and/or health status characteristics. This suggest that patient characteristics account for a relevant fraction of the identified disagreements between patient and general public values, and that mechanisms thought to be responsible for these disagreements, such as adaptation and response shift, have a differential impact across patient sub-groups.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12955-019-1240-8Patient valuesGeneral public valuesUtility valuesChronic low back pain
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J. M. van Dongen
M. L. van Hooff
A. P. Finch
M. W. van Tulder
J. E. Bosmans
R. W. J. G. Ostelo
M. de Kleuver
spellingShingle J. M. van Dongen
M. L. van Hooff
A. P. Finch
M. W. van Tulder
J. E. Bosmans
R. W. J. G. Ostelo
M. de Kleuver
Do socio-demographic characteristics and/or health status explain the magnitude of differences between patient and general public utility values? A chronic low back pain patients case study
Health and Quality of Life Outcomes
Patient values
General public values
Utility values
Chronic low back pain
author_facet J. M. van Dongen
M. L. van Hooff
A. P. Finch
M. W. van Tulder
J. E. Bosmans
R. W. J. G. Ostelo
M. de Kleuver
author_sort J. M. van Dongen
title Do socio-demographic characteristics and/or health status explain the magnitude of differences between patient and general public utility values? A chronic low back pain patients case study
title_short Do socio-demographic characteristics and/or health status explain the magnitude of differences between patient and general public utility values? A chronic low back pain patients case study
title_full Do socio-demographic characteristics and/or health status explain the magnitude of differences between patient and general public utility values? A chronic low back pain patients case study
title_fullStr Do socio-demographic characteristics and/or health status explain the magnitude of differences between patient and general public utility values? A chronic low back pain patients case study
title_full_unstemmed Do socio-demographic characteristics and/or health status explain the magnitude of differences between patient and general public utility values? A chronic low back pain patients case study
title_sort do socio-demographic characteristics and/or health status explain the magnitude of differences between patient and general public utility values? a chronic low back pain patients case study
publisher BMC
series Health and Quality of Life Outcomes
issn 1477-7525
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Abstract Background Utility values can be obtained from different respondent groups, including patients and members of the general public. Evidence suggests that patient values are typically higher than general public values. This study explores whether the magnitude of disagreement between both values can be explained by socio-demographic characteristics and/or health status. Methods Data of 5037 chronic low back pain patients were used. Self-reported EQ-VAS was employed as a proxy of patients’ preference for their own health state. General public values for the patients’ EQ-5D-3L health states were obtained using the Dutch VAS-based tariff. The difference between patient and general public values was assessed using a paired t-test. Subsequently, this difference was used as a dependent variable and regressed upon dummy variables of socio-demographic and health status characteristics. Coefficients represented age, gender, education level, social support, back pain intensity, leg pain intensity, functional status, comorbidities, catastrophizing, and treatment expectations. Results Patient values were higher than general public values (0.069; 95%CI:0.063–0.076). The magnitude of disagreement between both values was associated with age, gender, education level, social support, functional status, and comorbidities, but not with back pain intensity, leg pain intensity, catastrophizing, and treatment expectations. Conclusions Patients were found to value their own health status higher than members of the general public. The magnitude of disagreement between both values was found to differ by various socio-demographic and/or health status characteristics. This suggest that patient characteristics account for a relevant fraction of the identified disagreements between patient and general public values, and that mechanisms thought to be responsible for these disagreements, such as adaptation and response shift, have a differential impact across patient sub-groups.
topic Patient values
General public values
Utility values
Chronic low back pain
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12955-019-1240-8
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