The Relevance of Personal Characteristics in Health Care Rationing: What the Australian Public Thinks and Why
Creator
Anderson, Malcolm
Richardson, Jeff
McKie, John
Iezzi, Angelo
Khan, Munir
Bibliographic Citation
American journal of economics and sociology 2011; 70(1): 131-51
Abstract
This article examines the preferences of the general public in Australia regarding health care resource allocation. While previous studies have revealed that the public is willing to give priority to particular groups of patients based on their personal characteristics, the present article goes beyond previous efforts in attempting to explain these results. In the present study, there was strong support among respondents for giving ?equal priority? to people regardless of their personal characteristics. However, respondents did reveal a preference for married patients over single, for children over adults, for carers of children and the elderly, sole breadwinners, and good community contributors. Further, they would give a lower priority to those perceived as ?self-harmers??smokers, individuals with unhealthy diets, and those who rarely exercise. Variation in the answers according to broad economic and social beliefs across seven different categories (?factors?) influenced the pattern of the public's attitudes towards rationing. The Principal Components Analysis (PCA) indicated that most of the items in our survey are associated with seven factors that explain or capture much of the variation. These relate to a patient's avoidance of self-harm behaviors (Safe Living), their Life Style (diet, exercise, etc.), their contribution to the community through caring for others (Caring), their talents (Gifted), their sexual behavior (Sexuality), their age and marital status (Family), and whether they are an Australian citizen or employed (Citizen). The strength of social preferences?e.g., how strongly respondents would ?discriminate? against a recreational drug user or preference a person with a healthy diet?is related to the particular class of preferences.
Date
2011Collections
Metadata
Show full item recordRelated items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Response to "On the Relevance of Personal Characteristics in Setting Health Care Priorities"
Olsen, Jan Abel; Richardson, Jeff; Dolan, Paul; Menzel, Paul (2005-04)