Content
March 2006, Volume 15, Issue 3
- 241-261 Health status and labour force participation: evidence from Australia
by Lixin Cai & Guyonne Kalb - 263-279 Sometimes more equal than others: how health inequalities depend on the choice of welfare indicator
by Magnus Lindelow - 281-293 It's not just what you do, it's the way that you do it: the effect of different payment card formats and survey administration on willingness to pay for health gain
by Richard D. Smith - 295-310 Performance‐based budgeting in the public sector: an illustration from the VA health care system
by Suthathip Yaisawarng & James F. Burgess - 311-313 In defence of societal sovereignty: a comment on Nyman ‘the inclusion of survivor consumption in CUA’
by Jeffrey R. J. Richardson & Jan Abel Olsen - 315-317 Consumption costs and earnings during added years of life ‐ a reply to Nyman
by Afschin Gandjour - 319-322 More on survival consumption costs in cost‐utility analysis
by John A. Nyman - 323-325 On the lottery equivalents method: a response to Spencer et al
by Adam Oliver
February 2006, Volume 15, Issue 2
- 111-123 Measuring the effects of work loss on productivity with team production
by Sean Nicholson & Mark V. Pauly & Daniel Polsky & Claire Sharda & Helena Szrek & Marc L. Berger - 125-146 The relationship between education and health behavior: some empirical evidence
by Alexander J. Cowell - 147-158 Efficient allocation of resources to prevent HIV infection among injection drug users: the Prevention Point Philadelphia (PPP) needle exchange program
by Zoë K. Harris - 159-171 Value of life and behavior toward health risks: an interpretation of social capital
by Sherman Folland - 173-193 Use of primary health care services according to the different degrees of obesity in the Girona Health Region, Spain
by Marc Saez & Carme Saurina & Germà Coenders & Sònia González‐Raya - 195-204 Testing the construct validity of willingness to pay valuations using objective information about risk and health benefit
by Zoë Philips & David K. Whynes & Mark Avis - 205-210 How common is the ‘prominence effect’? Additional evidence to Whynes et al
by Judith Covey & Richard D. Smith - 211-214 Willingness to pay for reductions in health risks when probabilities are distorted
by Han Bleichrodt & Louis Eeckhoudt - 215-218 Multi‐method approach to valuing health states: problems with meaning
by Erik Nord & Paul Menzel & Jeff Richardson
January 2006, Volume 15, Issue 1
- 1-4 Discounting and cost‐effectiveness in NICE – stepping back to sort out a confusion
by Karl Claxton & Mark Sculpher & Anthony Culyer & Chris McCabe & Andrew Briggs & Ron Akehurst & Martin Buxton & John Brazier - 5-18 Pharmaceutical promotion and GP prescription behaviour
by Frank Windmeijer & Eric de Laat & Rudy Douven & Esther Mot - 19-31 Horizontal equity in utilisation of care and fairness of health financing: a comparison of micro‐health insurance and user fees in Rwanda
by Pia Schneider & Kara Hanson - 33-47 Why worry about awareness in choice problems? Econometric analysis of screening for cervical cancer
by Rochelle Belkar & Denzil G. Fiebig & Marion Haas & Rosalie Viney - 49-64 Revisiting physicians' financial incentives in Quebec: a panel system approach
by Abdelhak Nassiri & Lise Rochaix - 65-81 National road casualties and economic development
by David Bishai & Asma Quresh & Prashant James & Abdul Ghaffar - 83-97 Are mental health insurance mandates effective? Evidence from suicides
by Jonathan Klick & Sara Markowitz - 99-104 Making health continuous: implications of different methods on the measurement of inequality
by Ann Lecluyse & Irina Cleemput
September 2005, Volume 14, Issue S1
- 3-6 The contestable nature of health policy analysis
by Adam Oliver & Elias Mossialos & Alan Maynard - 7-23 Monitoring political decision‐making and its impact in Austria
by Adolf Stepan & Margit Sommersguter‐Reichmann - 25-39 Health care reform in Belgium
by Erik Schokkaert & Carine Van de Voorde - 41-57 The Danish health care system: evolution ‐ not revolution ‐ in a decentralized system
by Kjeld Møller Pedersen & Terkel Christiansen & Mickael Bech - 59-74 Rationing and competition in the Dutch health‐care system
by Frederik T. Schut & Wynand P. M. M. Van de Ven - 75-99 The English National Health Service: 1979‐2005
by Adam Oliver - 101-118 The impact of changes in Finland's health care system
by Unto Häkkinen - 119-132 The search for the Holy Grail: combining decentralised planning and contracting mechanisms in the French health care system
by Martine M. Bellanger & Philippe R. Mossé - 133-149 Analysing the impact of health‐care system change in the EU member states – Germany
by Markus Wörz & Reinhard Busse - 151-168 Analysing the Greek health system: a tale of fragmentation and inertia
by Elias Mossialos & Sara Allin & Konstantina Davaki - 169-186 The Irish health system: developments in strategy, structure, funding and delivery since 1980
by Miriam M. Wiley - 187-202 The Italian health‐care system
by George France & Francesco Taroni & Andrea Donatini - 203-220 Health care reform in Portugal: an evaluation of the NHS experience
by Mónica Duarte Oliveira & Carlos Gouveia Pinto - 221-235 Diversity and regional inequalities in the Spanish ‘system of health care services’
by Guillem Lopez‐Casasnovas & Joan Costa‐Font & Ivan Planas - 237-254 Swedish healthcare under pressure
by Anders Anell - 255-263 European health policy challenges
by Alan Maynard
December 2005, Volume 14, Issue 12
- 1197-1215 Socioeconomic status, depression disparities, and financial strain: what lies behind the income‐depression relationship?
by Frederick J. Zimmerman & Wayne Katon - 1217-1229 Methods for incorporating covariate adjustment, subgroup analysis and between‐centre differences into cost‐effectiveness evaluations
by Richard M. Nixon & Simon G. Thompson - 1231-1238 Regulation versus practice ‐ the impact of accessibility on the use of specialist health care in Norway
by Tor Iversen & Gry Stine Kopperud - 1239-1251 Auctions vs negotiations: a study of price differentials
by Egil Kjerstad - 1253-1271 Risk selection in the German public health insurance system
by Robert Nuscheler & Thomas Knaus - 1273-1281 Smoke‐free laws and bar revenues in California – the last call
by David W. Cowling & Philip Bond - 1283-1286 QALYs and capabilities: a comment on Cookson
by Paul Anand - 1287-1289 QALYs and capabilities: a response to Anand
by Richard Cookson - 1291-1292 Using cost‐effectiveness analysis to improve health care: opportunities and barriers, by PETER J. NEUMANN. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2005. No. of pages: 224. ISBN 0 19 517186 1
by Andrea Manca
November 2005, Volume 14, Issue 11
- 1087-1101 Unemployment, labor force composition and sickness absence: a panel data study
by Jan Erik Askildsen & Espen Bratberg & Øivind Anti Nilsen - 1103-1115 Developing a relativities approach to valuing the prevention of non‐fatal work‐related accidents and ill health
by Jonathan Karnon & Aki Tsuchiya & Paul Dolan - 1117-1131 Are HMOs bad for health maintenance?
by John A. Rizzo - 1133-1150 Benefits and costs of methadone treatment: results from a lifetime simulation model
by Gary A. Zarkin & Laura J. Dunlap & Katherine A. Hicks & Daniel Mamo - 1151-1168 Hospital ownership, reimbursement systems and mortality rates
by Carine Milcent - 1169-1189 An investigation into the empirical validity of the EQ‐5D and SF‐6D based on hypothetical preferences in a general population
by Stavros Petrou & Christine Hockley - 1191-1195 Think of a number… any number?
by David K. Whynes & Zoë Philips & Emma Frew
October 2005, Volume 14, Issue 10
- 987-997 Why economics is good for your health. 2004 Royal Economic Society Public Lecture
by Carol Propper - 999-1018 The effect of health changes and long‐term health on the work activity of older Canadians
by Doreen Wing Han Au & Thomas F. Crossley & Martin Schellhorn - 1019-1034 Schooling, cognitive ability and health
by M. Christopher Auld & Nirmal Sidhu - 1035-1045 A panel data study of physicians' labor supply: the case of Norway
by Badi H. Baltagi & Espen Bratberg & Tor Helge Holmås - 1047-1060 GP reimbursement and visiting behaviour in Ireland
by David Madden & Anne Nolan & Brian Nolan - 1061-1071 Tobacco industry price‐subsidizing promotions may overcome the downward pressure of higher prices on initiation of regular smoking
by John P. Pierce & Todd P. Gilmer & Lora Lee & Elizabeth A. Gilpin & Joy de Beyer & Karen Messer - 1073-1077 Allocating health care resources under risk: risk aversion and prudence matter
by Phuong Bui & David Crainich & Louis Eeckhoudt - 1079-1083 Effects coding in discrete choice experiments
by Mickael Bech & Dorte Gyrd‐Hansen - 1085-1086 Public health, ethics and equity by SUDHIR ANAND, FABIENNE PETER AND AMARTYA SEN. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2004. No. of pages: 316. ISBN 0‐19‐927636‐6
by Richard Cookson
September 2005, Volume 14, Issue 9
- 873-892 Latent class models for use of primary care: evidence from a British panel
by Teresa Bago d'Uva - 893-907 Assessing household health expenditure with Box–Cox censoring models
by Jean‐Paul Chaze - 909-923 Estimating the price elasticity of expenditure for prescription drugs in the presence of non‐linear price schedules: an illustration from Quebec, Canada
by Paul Contoyannis & Jeremiah Hurley & Paul Grootendorst & Sung‐Hee Jeon & Robyn Tamblyn - 925-938 A dynamic analysis of disability and labour force participation in Ireland 1995–2000
by Brenda Gannon - 939-953 Utilization of public health centres in Portugal: effect of time costs and other determinants. Finite mixture models applied to truncated samples
by Óscar D. Lourenço & Pedro L. Ferreira - 955-970 Road injuries and long‐run effects on income and employment
by Anne Moller Dano - 971-985 Waiting lists, waiting times and admissions: an empirical analysis at hospital and general practice level
by Frank Windmeijer & Hugh Gravelle & Pierre Hoonhout
August 2005, Volume 14, Issue 8
- 763-776 The analysis of incomplete cost data due to dropout
by Jan B. Oostenbrink & Maiwenn J. Al - 777-791 Determinants of influenza vaccination timing
by Byung Kwang Yoo & Kevin Frick - 793-803 Analysis of a pharmaceutical risk sharing agreement based on the purchaser's total budget
by Gregory S. Zaric & Bernie J. O'Brien - 805-815 A propensity score approach to estimating the cost–effectiveness of medical therapies from observational data
by Nandita Mitra & Alka Indurkhya - 817-829 QALYs and the capability approach
by Richard Cookson - 831-850 Increasing socio‐economic inequalities in life expectancy and QALYs in Sweden 1980–1997
by Kristina Burström & Magnus Johannesson & Finn Diderichsen - 851-867 AIDS education, condom demand, and the sexual activity of American youth
by Carol Horton Tremblay & Davina C. Ling - 869-870 The politics of medicare: who gets what, when and how by GWENDOLYN GRAY. UNSW Press, Australia, 2004. No. of pages: 111. ISBN 0‐86840‐703‐8
by Jane Hall
July 2005, Volume 14, Issue 7
- 655-667 Optimal allocation of resources over health care programmes: dealing with decreasing marginal utility and uncertainty
by Maiwenn J. Al & Talitha L. Feenstra & Ben A. van Hout - 669-678 The importance of age in allocating health care resources: does intervention‐type matter?
by Mira Johri & Laura J. Damschroder & Brian J. Zikmund‐Fisher & Peter A. Ubel - 679-685 The gap effect: discontinuities of preferences around dead
by Peep F. M. Stalmeier & Jan J. V. Busschbach & Leida M. Lamers & Paul F. M. Krabbe - 687-701 Preferences for hospital quality in Zambia: results from a discrete choice experiment
by Kara Hanson & Barbara McPake & Pamela Nakamba & Luke Archard - 703-719 Information and sorting in the market for obstetrical services
by Darren Grant - 721-735 Determinants of physicians' decisions to specialize
by Robert Gagné & Pierre Thomas Léger - 737-753 The impact of HMO penetration on the relationship between nurse staffing and quality
by Barbara A. Mark & David W. Harless & Michael McCue - 755-761 Correcting for bias when estimating the cost of hospital‐acquired infection: an analysis of lower respiratory tract infections in non‐surgical patients
by Nicholas Graves & Diana Weinhold & Jennifer A. Roberts
June 2005, Volume 14, Issue 6
- 545-557 Using covariates to reduce uncertainty in the economic evaluation of clinical trial data
by F. J. Vázquez‐Polo & M. A. Negrín Hernández & B. González López‐Valcárcel - 559-573 Technology and managed care: patient benefits of telemedicine in a rural health care network
by Matthew Berman & Andrea Fenaughty - 575-593 Outcome versus service based payments in health care: lessons from African traditional healers
by Kenneth L. Leonard & Joshua Graff Zivin - 595-608 Effects of socio‐economic status on mortality: separating the nearby from the farther away
by Jeroen Smits & Ingeborg Keij‐Deerenberg & Gert Westert - 609-619 ‘Threats’ to and hopes for estimating benefits
by Mandy Ryan & Mabelle Amaya‐Amaya - 621-626 The welfare loss from hospital cost‐shifting behavior: a partial equilibrium analysis
by Rexford E. Santerre - 627-641 The effect of Taiwan's tax‐induced increases in cigarette prices on brand‐switching and the consumption of cigarettes
by Yi‐Wen Tsai & Chung‐Lin Yang & Chin‐Shyan Chen & Tsai‐Ching Liu & Pei‐Fen Chen - 643-647 Is silence golden? A test of the incorporation of the effects of ill‐health on income and leisure in health state valuations
by Pedram Sendi & Werner B. F. Brouwer - 649-653 Inequality decomposition and geographic targeting with applications to China and Vietnam
by Adam Wagstaff
May 2005, Volume 14, Issue 5
- 435-443 Correcting for compensating mechanisms related to productivity costs in economic evaluations of health care programmes
by Karin H. M. Jacob‐Tacken & Marc A. Koopmanschap & Willem Jan Meerding & Johan L. Severens - 445-455 Stochastic league tables: an application to diabetes interventions in the Netherlands
by Raymond C. W. Hutubessy & Louis W. Niessen & Rob F. Dijkstra & Ton F. Casparie & Frans F. Rutten - 457-470 Risk aversion and uncertainty in cost‐effectiveness analysis: the expected‐utility, moment‐generating function approach
by Elamin H. Elbasha - 471-485 Assessing generalisability by location in trial‐based cost‐effectiveness analysis: the use of multilevel models
by Andrea Manca & Nigel Rice & Mark J. Sculpher & Andrew H. Briggs - 487-496 Estimating mean QALYs in trial‐based cost‐effectiveness analysis: the importance of controlling for baseline utility
by Andrea Manca & Neil Hawkins & Mark J. Sculpher - 497-511 The effect of welfare reform on prenatal care and birth weight
by Robert Kaestner & Won Chan Lee - 513-527 On a policy of transferring public patients to private practice
by Paula González - 529-536 Inter‐rater and test–retest reliability of three contingent valuation question formats in south‐east Nigeria
by Obinna Onwujekwe & Julia Fox‐Rushby & Kara Hanson - 537-544 The impact of diabetes on employment: genetic IVs in a bivariate probit
by H. Shelton Brown & José A. Pagán & Elena Bastida
April 2005, Volume 14, Issue 4
- 325-326 Editorial
by Alan Maynard & John Hutton & Andrew Jones - 327-338 Country specific cost comparisons from multinational clinical trials using empirical Bayesian shrinkage estimation: the Canadian ASSENT‐3 economic analysis
by Andrew R. Willan & Eleanor M. Pinto & Bernie J. O'Brien & Padma Kaul & Ron Goeree & Larry Lynd & Paul W. Armstrong - 339-347 Probabilistic sensitivity analysis for NICE technology assessment: not an optional extra
by Karl Claxton & Mark Sculpher & Chris McCabe & Andrew Briggs & Ron Akehurst & Martin Buxton & John Brazier & Tony O'Hagan - 349-362 Empirical investigation of experimental design properties of discrete choice experiments in health care
by Rosalie Viney & Elizabeth Savage & Jordan Louviere - 363-376 The economic value of informal care: a study of informal caregivers' and patients' willingness to pay and willingness to accept for informal care
by Bernard van den Berg & Han Bleichrodt & Louis Eeckhoudt - 377-389 Inequalities in self‐reported physical health in the United States, 1993‐1999
by Saloua Sehili & Elamin H. Elbasha & David G. Moriarty & Matthew M. Zack - 391-406 Access to health care resources in the UK: the case of care for arthritis
by Carol Propper & Jenny Eachus & Philip Chan & Nicky Pearson & George Davey Smith - 407-419 State motor vehicle laws and older drivers
by Michael A. Morrisey & David C. Grabowski - 421-428 Parametric modelling of cost data: some simulation evidence
by Andrew Briggs & Richard Nixon & Simon Dixon & Simon Thompson - 429-432 The bounds of the concentration index when the variable of interest is binary, with an application to immunization inequality
by Adam Wagstaff - 433-434 Getting health reform right: a guide to improving performance and equity by Marc J. Roberts, William Hsaio, Peter Berman and Michael R. Reich. Oxford University Press, Oxford, New York, 2004. No. of pages: 332. ISBN 0‐19‐516232‐3
by Alan Williams
March 2005, Volume 14, Issue 3
- 217-230 Modelling EuroQol health‐related utility values for diabetic complications from CODE‐2 data
by Adrian Bagust & Sophie Beale - 231-244 Health state values for the HUI 2 descriptive system: results from a UK survey
by Christopher McCabe & Katherine Stevens & Jennifer Roberts & John Brazier - 245-256 Measuring the productive efficiency and clinical quality of institutional long‐term care for the elderly
by Juha Laine & Miika Linna & Unto Häkkinen & Anja Noro - 257-267 Smokers' expectations to quit smoking
by Henrik Hammar & Fredrik Carlsson - 269-292 The impact of price regulation on the launch delay of new drugs—evidence from twenty‐five major markets in the 1990s
by Patricia M. Danzon & Y. Richard Wang & Liang Wang - 293-306 Warm glow, free‐riding and vehicle neutrality in a health‐related contingent valuation study
by Franz Hackl & Gerald J. Pruckner - 307-322 ‘Irrational’ stated preferences: a quantitative and qualitative investigation
by Fernando San Miguel & Mandy Ryan & Mabelle Amaya‐Amaya
February 2005, Volume 14, Issue 2
- 107-116 Public and private pharmaceutical spending as determinants of health outcomes in Canada
by Pierre‐Yves Crémieux & Marie‐Claude Meilleur & Pierre Ouellette & Patrick Petit & Martin Zelder & Ken Potvin - 119-134 Habit formation and college students' demand for alcohol
by Jenny Williams - 135-148 Predictors of elderly mortality:health status, socioeconomic characteristics and social determinants of health
by Cem Mete - 149-159 Testing the internal consistency of the lottery equivalents method using health outcomes
by Adam Oliver - 161-167 Testing the internal consistency of the lottery equivalents method using health outcomes: a comment to Oliver
by A. Spencer & J. Covey & S. Chilton & M. Taylor - 169-183 Economic valuation of informal care: the contingent valuation method applied to informal caregiving
by Bernard van denBerg & Werner Brouwer & Job van Exel & Marc Koopmanschap - 185-196 Using multilevel models for assessing the variability of multinational resource use and cost data
by Richard Grieve & Richard Nixon & Simon G. Thompson & Charles Normand - 197-208 QALY maximisation and people's preferences: a methodological review of the literature
by Paul Dolan & Rebecca Shaw & Aki Tsuchiya & Alan Williams - 209-213 Influences of the absence of random assignment of bids on estimating willingness to pay using a discrete‐choice question
by Shinji Takemura & Takashi Ohida & Tomofumi Sone & Takashi Fukuda & Yukie Takemura
January 2005, Volume 14, Issue 1
- 1-16 Examining the link between price regulation and pharmaceutical R&D investment
by John A. Vernon - 17-23 Does more choice reduce waiting times?
by Luigi Siciliani - 25-38 The role of consumer knowledge of insurance benefits in the demand for preventive health care among the elderly
by Stephen T. Parente & David S. Salkever & Joan DaVanzo - 39-53 Are QALYs based on time trade‐off comparable? – A systematic review of TTO methodologies
by Trude Arnesen & Mari Trommald - 55-67 Willingness to pay for low‐lung‐cancer‐risk cigarettes in Taiwan
by Man‐Ser Jan & Tsu‐Tan Fu & Chung L. Huang - 69-82 Measuring the health of populations: the veil of ignorance approach
by José‐Luis Pinto‐Prades & José‐María Abellán‐Perpiñán - 83-91 Valuation of the risk of SARS in Taiwan
by Jin‐Tan Liu & James K. Hammitt & Jung‐Der Wang & Meng‐Wen Tsou - 93-99 Comparing costing results in across country economic evaluations: the use of technology specific purchasing power parities
by Sarah Wordsworth & Anne Ludbrook - 101-102 Motivation, agency and public policy: of knights and knaves, pawns and queens, by Julian Le Grand. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2003. No. of pages: 191. ISBN 0‐19‐926699‐9
by Karen Bloor
December 2004, Volume 13, Issue 12
- 1149-1165 Cost efficiency in primary care contracting: a stochastic frontier cost function approach
by Jaume Puig‐Junoy & Vicente Ortún - 1167-1180 The impact of quality on the demand for outpatient services in Cyprus
by Kara Hanson & Winnie C. Yip & William Hsiao - 1181-1190 Cost‐effectiveness with multiple outcomes
by Jakob Bjørner & Hans Keiding - 1191-1201 Tobacco initiation, cessation, and change: evidence from Vietnam
by Ramanan Laxminarayan & Anil Deolalikar - 1203-1210 Calculation of quality adjusted life years in the published literature: a review of methodology and transparency
by Gerald Richardson & Andrea Manca
November 2004, Volume 13, Issue 11
- 1081-1089 Co‐payments for prescription drugs and the demand for doctor visits – Evidence from a natural experiment
by Rainer Winkelmann - 1091-1116 Scope and scale inefficiencies in physician practices
by Robert Rosenman & Daniel Friesner - 1117-1124 Accounting for the cost of scaling‐up health interventions
by Benjamin Johns & Rob Baltussen - 1125-1136 The role of public and private transfers in the cost‐benefit analysis of mental health programs
by Robert J. Brent - 1137-1144 Waiting time and doctor shopping in a mixed medical economy
by Raymond Y.T. Yeung & Gabriel M. Leung & Sarah M. McGhee & Janice M. Johnston - 1145-1146 Measuring the Gains from Medical Research, by KEVIN M. MURPHY and ROBERT H. TOPEL. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 2003. No. of pages: 263. ISBN 0‐226‐55178‐4
by John A. Vernon - 1147-1148 Letter to the editor
by Jacob M. Puliyel & Mark Miller
October 2004, Volume 13, Issue 10
- 925-926 Guest Editors' Introduction
by Andrew Jones & Owen O'donnell - 927-939 The sources of hospital cost variability
by Brigitte Dormont & Carine Milcent - 941-958 The effect of practice budgets on patient waiting times: allowing for selection bias
by Mark Dusheiko & Hugh Gravelle & Rowena Jacobs - 959-980 Distinguishing between heterogeneity and inefficiency: stochastic frontier analysis of the World Health Organization's panel data on national health care systems
by William Greene - 981-1001 A longitudinal analysis of mental health mobility in Britain
by Katharina Hauck & Nigel Rice - 1003-1014 Estimating the demand for health care with panel data: a semiparametric Bayesian approach
by Markus Jochmann & Roberto León‐González - 1015-1030 Measurement and explanation of socioeconomic inequality in health with longitudinal data
by Andrew M. Jones & Angel López Nicolás - 1031-1044 Accounting for misclassification error in retrospective smoking data
by Donald S. Kenkel & Dean R. Lillard & Alan D. Mathios - 1045-1062 The effect of work on mental health: does occupation matter?
by Ana Llena‐Nozal & Maarten Lindeboom & France Portrait - 1063-1080 The effect of the tobacco settlement and smoking bans on alcohol consumption
by Gabriel A. Picone & Frank Sloan & Justin G. Trogdon
September 2004, Volume 13, Issue 9
- 825-843 Alcohol and marijuana use among college students: economic complements or substitutes?
by J. Williams & Rosalie Liccardo Pacula & Frank J. Chaloupka & Henry Wechsler - 845-857 Health insurance and treatment seeking behaviour: evidence from a low‐income country
by Matthew Jowett & Anil Deolalikar & Peter Martinsson - 859-872 Money for health: the equivalent variation of cardiovascular diseases
by Wim Groot & Henriëtte Maassen van den Brink & Erik Plug - 873-884 A comparison of the EQ‐5D and SF‐6D across seven patient groups
by John Brazier & Jennifer Roberts & Aki Tsuchiya & Jan Busschbach - 885-899 The wage effects of obesity: a longitudinal study
by Charles L. Baum & William F. Ford - 901-907 Deriving welfare measures from discrete choice experiments: inconsistency between current methods and random utility and welfare theory
by Emily Lancsar & Elizabeth Savage - 909-912 Deriving welfare measures in discrete choice experiments: a comment to Lancsar and Savage (1)
by Mandy Ryan - 913-918 Deriving welfare measures in discrete choice experiments: a comment to Lancsar and Savage (2)
by J.M.C. Santos Silva - 919-924 Deriving welfare measures from discrete choice experiments: a response to Ryan and Santos Silva
by Emily Lancsar & Elizabeth Savage
August 2004, Volume 13, Issue 8
- 739-747 The productivity of health care and health production functions
by Çağatay Koç - 749-765 Comparing alternative models: log vs Cox proportional hazard?
by Anirban Basu & Willard G. Manning & John Mullahy - 767-779 Do economic cycles have a permanent effect on population health? Revisiting the Brenner hypothesis
by Audrey Laporte - 781-791 The effect of a major cigarette price change on smoking behavior in california: a zero‐inflated negative binomial model
by Mei‐ling Sheu & Teh‐wei Hu & Theodore E. Keeler & Michael Ong & Hai‐Yen Sung - 793-805 Assessing quality of life in the elderly: a direct comparison of the EQ‐5D and AQoL
by Richard Holland & Richard D Smith & Ian Harvey & Louise Swift & Elizabeth Lenaghan - 807-818 The implications of linking questions within the SG and TTO methods
by Anne Spencer - 819-823 The influence of subjective expectations about length and quality of life on time trade‐off answers
by Floortje van Nooten & Werner Brouwer
July 2004, Volume 13, Issue 7
- 605-608 Income‐related inequality in health and health care in the European Union
by Eddy van Doorslaer & Andrew M. Jones - 609-628 Explaining the differences in income‐related health inequalities across European countries
by Eddy van Doorslaer & Xander Koolman - 629-647 Explaining income‐related inequalities in doctor utilisation in Europe
by Eddy van Doorslaer & Xander Koolman & Andrew M. Jones - 649-656 On the interpretation of a concentration index of inequality
by Xander Koolman & Eddy van Doorslaer - 657-668 Determinants of access to physician services in Italy: a latent class seemingly unrelated probit approach
by Vincenzo Atella & Francesco Brindisi & Partha Deb & Furio C. Rosati - 669-687 Access to physician services: does supplemental insurance matter? Evidence from France
by Thomas C. Buchmueller & Agnès Couffinhal & Michel Grignon & Marc Perronnin - 689-703 The effect of private insurance access on the choice of GP/specialist and public/private provider in Spain
by Marisol Rodríguez & Alexandrina Stoyanova - 705-724 Measuring horizontal inequity in Belgian health care using a Gaussian random effects two part count data model
by Tom Van Ourti - 725-732 Measuring inequality in self‐reported health—discussion of a recently suggested approach using Finnish data
by Jorgen Lauridsen & Terkel Christiansen & Unto Häkkinen - 733-737 To what extent do people prefer health states with higher values? A note on evidence from the EQ‐5D valuation set
by Jennifer Roberts & Paul Dolan
June 2004, Volume 13, Issue 6
- 505-524 Should physicians' dual practice be limited? An incentive approach
by Paula González - 525-541 Decomposing the effects of children's health on mother's labor supply: is it time or money?
by Elise Gould - 543-562 Aging and aggregate costs of medical care: conceptual and policy issues
by Dov Chernichovsky & Sara Markowitz - 563-573 Using stated preference and revealed preference modeling to evaluate prescribing decisions
by Tami L. Mark & Joffre Swait - 575-583 How property rights and patents affect antibiotic resistance
by John B. Horowitz & H. Brian Moehring - 585-595 Resistance‐induced antibiotic substitution
by David H. Howard - 597-604 Price discrimination in obstetric services – a case study in Bangladesh
by Mohammad Amin & Kara Hanson & Anne Mills
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