Content
December 2004, Volume 13, Issue 12
- 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
May 2004, Volume 13, Issue 5
- 403-404 Bernie O'Brien
by Michael Drummond - 405-415 Cost‐effectiveness acceptability curves – facts, fallacies and frequently asked questions
by Elisabeth Fenwick & Bernie J. O'Brien & Andrew Briggs - 417-427 Should the consumption of survivors be included as a cost in cost–utility analysis?
by John A. Nyman - 429-436 When does quality‐adjusting life‐years matter in cost‐effectiveness analysis?
by Richard H. Chapman & Marc Berger & Milton C. Weinstein & Jane C. Weeks & Sue Goldie & Peter J. Neumann - 437-452 Does NICE have a cost‐effectiveness threshold and what other factors influence its decisions? A binary choice analysis
by Nancy Devlin & David Parkin - 453-459 Why cost‐effectiveness should trump (clinical) effectiveness: the ethical economics of the South West quadrant
by Jack Dowie - 461-475 Regression methods for covariate adjustment and subgroup analysis for non‐censored cost‐effectiveness data
by Andrew R. Willan & Andrew H. Briggs & Jeffrey S. Hoch - 477-492 Stated and actual altruistic willingness to pay for insecticide‐treated nets in Nigeria: validity of open‐ended and binary with follow‐up questions
by Obinna Onwujekwe & Benjamin Uzochukwu - 493-498 Comorbidities and the willingness to pay for reducing the risk of a targeted disease: introducing endogenous effort for risk reduction
by Liqun Liu - 499-500 Getting Health Economics into Practice, Edited by David Kernick. Radcliffe Medical Press, Oxford, 2002. No. of pages: 358. ISBN 1‐85775‐575‐8
by Nancy J. Devlin - 500-500 Health Inequalities, Edited by George Davey Smith. The Policy Press, Bristol, 2003. No. of pages: 548. ISBN 1‐86134‐322‐1
by Joy damson - 501-501 Global Public Goods for Health. Health Economic and Public Health Perspectives, Edited by Richard Smith, Robert Beaglehole, David Woodward and Nick Drager. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2003. No. of pages: 287. ISBN 0‐19‐852798‐5
by Bruce Hollingsworth
April 2004, Volume 13, Issue 4
- 303-314 Ageing and health‐care expenditure: the red herring argument revisited
by Meena Seshamani & Alastair Gray - 315-327 Time to include time to death? The future of health care expenditure predictions
by Sally C. Stearns & Edward C. Norton - 329-344 Quality safeguards and regulation of online pharmacies
by Benito Arruñada - 345-361 A utility‐theoretic approach to the aggregation of willingness to pay measured in decomposed scenarios: development and empirical test
by Thomas Hammerschmidt & Hans‐Peter Zeitler & Reiner Leidl - 363-377 Scale and scope economies in nursing homes: A quantile regression approach
by Eric W. Christensen - 379-395 A comparison of the grade of membership measure with alternative health indicators in explaining costs for older people
by Paul McNamee - 397-402 Modelling non‐demanders in choice experiments
by Mandy Ryan & Diane Skåtun
March 2004, Volume 13, Issue 3
- 203-226 Comprehensive decision analytical modelling in economic evaluation: a Bayesian approach
by Nicola J. Cooper & Alex J. Sutton & Keith R. Abrams & David Turner & Allan Wailoo - 227-238 Cost‐effectiveness analysis of two strategies for mass screening for colorectal cancer in France
by Célia Berchi & Véronique Bouvier & Jean‐Marie Réaud & Guy Launoy - 239-250 Labor market costs of illness: prevalence matters
by Thomas DeLeire & Willard Manning - 251-264 The effect of prenatal care on birthweight: a full‐information maximum likelihood approach
by Jeffrey J. Rous & R. Todd Jewell & Robert W. Brown - 265-280 Empirical assessment of the economic behaviour of Dutch general hospitals
by J.L.T. Blank & A.H.Q.M. Merkies - 281-290 A multi‐method approach to measuring health‐state valuations
by Joshua A. Salomon & Christopher J.L. Murray - 291-296 A comparison of stated preference methods for estimating monetary values
by Mandy Ryan - 297-301 Overall versus socioeconomic health inequality: a measurement framework and two empirical illustrations
by Adam Wagstaff & Eddy van Doorslaer
February 2004, Volume 13, Issue 2
- 101-122 Using simulation‐based inference with panel data in health economics
by Paul Contoyannis & Andrew M. Jones & Roberto Leon‐Gonzalez - 123-137 The effects of price and policy on marijuana use: what can be learned from the Australian experience?
by J. Williams - 139-155 Does problem drinking affect employment? Evidence from England
by Ziggy MacDonald & Michael A. Shields - 157-169 Excess capacity and expense preference behaviour in National Health Systems: an application to the Spanish public hospitals
by Ana Rodríguez‐Álvarez & C. A. Knox Lovell - 171-181 Lack of multiplicative transitivity in person trade‐off responses
by Michaël Schwarzinger & Jean‐Louis Lanoë & Erik Nord & Isabelle Durand‐Zaleski - 183-190 Evidence of range bias in contingent valuation payment scales
by David K. Whynes & Jane L. Wolstenholme & Emma Frew - 191-198 Bayesian estimation of cost‐effectiveness: an importance‐sampling approach
by Daniel F. Heitjan & Huiling Li - 199-202 Managed care and shadow price
by Ching‐to A. Ma
January 2004, Volume 13, Issue 1
- 1-8 Insomnia, biological clock, and the bedtime decision: an economic perspective
by Gideon Yaniv - 9-19 Cost‐effectiveness analysis based on the number‐needed‐to‐treat: common sense or non‐sense?
by Ivar Sønbø Kristiansen & Dorte Gyrd‐Hansen - 21-35 Cost‐effectiveness analysis and health care resource allocation: decision rules under variable returns to scale
by Elamin H. Elbasha & Mark L. Messonnier - 37-48 Responses to standard gambles: are preferences ‘well constructed’?
by Rachel Baker & Angela Robinson - 49-58 The effects of higher cigarette prices on tar and nicotine consumption in a cohort of adult smokers
by M.C. Farrelly & C.T. Nimsch & A. Hyland & M. Cummings - 59-71 The value of risk‐free cigarettes – do smokers underestimate the risk?
by Henrik Hammar & Olof Johansson‐Stenman - 73-86 Increasing patient choice in primary care: the management of minor ailments
by Chris Bojke & Hugh Gravelle & Karen Hassell & Zoe Whittington - 87-94 Simulation of a Hirschman–Herfindahl index without complete market share information
by Eric Nauenberg & Mahdi Alkhamisi & Yuri Andrijuk - 100-100 Thirteenth European Workshop on Econometrics and Health Economics
by Andrew Jones
December 2003, Volume 12, Issue 12
- 985-1004 Modelling supply and demand influences on the use of health care: implications for deriving a needs‐based capitation formula
by Hugh Gravelle & Matthew Sutton & Stephen Morris & Frank Windmeijer & Alastair Leyland & Chris Dibben & Mike Muirhead - 1005-1020 Classical versus relational approaches to understanding controls on a contract with independent GPs in South Africa
by Natasha Palmer & Anne Mills - 1021-1034 Analysis of hospital length of stay and discharge destination using hazard functions with unmeasured heterogeneity
by Gabriel Picone & R. Mark Wilson & Shin‐Yi Chou - 1035-1047 An experiment on simplifying conjoint analysis designs for measuring preferences
by Tara Maddala & Kathryn A. Phillips & F. Reed Johnson - 1049-1060 Willingness to pay for a QALY
by Dorte Gyrd‐Hansen - 1061-1067 An empirical comparison of EQ‐5D and SF‐6D in liver transplant patients
by Louise Longworth & Stirling Bryan
November 2003, Volume 12, Issue 11
- 891-894 Willingness to pay methods in health care: a sceptical view
by Richard Cookson - 895-907 How much confidence should we place in efficiency estimates?
by Andrew Street - 909-919 If the price is right: vagueness and values clarification in contingent valuation
by Alan Shiell & Lisa Gold - 921-933 Catastrophe and impoverishment in paying for health care: with applications to Vietnam 1993–1998
by Adam Wagstaff & Eddy van Doorslaer - 935-947 Estimating mean hospital cost as a function of length of stay and patient characteristics
by Elena Polverejan & Joseph C. Gardiner & Cathy J. Bradley & Margaret Holmes‐Rovner & David Rovner - 949-958 Illustrating the impact of including future costs in economic evaluations: an application to end‐stage renal disease care
by Braden Manns & David Meltzer & Ken Taub & Cam Donaldson - 959-974 Estimating the marginal value of ‘better’ research output: ‘designed’ versus ‘routine’ data in randomised controlled trials
by David Cohen & Mirella F Longo & John Williams & Wai‐yee Cheung & Hayley Hutchings & I.T. Russell - 975-981 A view from the bridge: agreement between the SF‐6D utility algorithm and the Health Utilities Index
by Bernie J. O'Brien & Marian Spath & Gordon Blackhouse & J.L. Severens & Paul Dorian & John Brazier - 983-983 Book Review
by Sherry Glied
October 2003, Volume 12, Issue 10
- 797-801 Labour markets in the NHS: an agenda for research
by Bob Elliott - 803-819 Measuring income related inequality in health: standardisation and the partial concentration index
by Hugh Gravelle - 821-835 Cigarette demand: a meta‐analysis of elasticities
by Craig A. Gallet & John A. List - 837-848 Alternative decision modelling techniques for the evaluation of health care technologies: Markov processes versus discrete event simulation
by Jonathan Karnon - 849-862 Willingness‐to‐pay for community‐based insurance in Burkina Faso
by Hengjin Dong & Bocar Kouyate & John Cairns & Frederick Mugisha & Rainer Sauerborn - 863-871 Testing rank‐dependent utility theory for health outcomes
by Adam Oliver - 873-877 The value of life: individual preferences and social choice. A comment to Magnus Johannesson
by Erik Nord & Paul Menzel & Jeff Richardson - 879-884 Conservative versus aggressive follow up of mildly abnormal Pap smears: Testing for process utility
by Stephen Birch & Joy Melnikow & Miriam Kuppermann - 885-890 What difference does the choice of SES make in health inequality measurement?
by Adam Wagstaff & Naoko Watanabe
September 2003, Volume 12, Issue 9
- 703-704 Guest editors' introduction
by Andrew Jones & Owen O'Donnell - 705-719 Wage policy in the health care sector: a panel data analysis of nurses' labour supply
by Jan Erik Askildsen & Badi H. Baltagi & Tor Helge Holmås - 721-739 Economics of self‐medication: theory and evidence
by Fwu‐Ranq Chang & Pravin K. Trivedi - 741-754 Fixed fees and physician‐induced demand: A panel data study on French physicians
by Eric Delattre & Brigitte Dormont - 755-770 Why do the sick not utilise health care? The case of Zambia
by Catharina Hjortsberg - 771-790 A structural econometric model of family valuation and choice of employer‐sponsored health insurance in the United States
by David J. Vanness - 791-796 Willingness to pay and size of health benefit: an integrated model to test for ‘sensitivity to scale’
by Raymond Y.T. Yeung & Richard D. Smith & Sarah M. McGhee
August 2003, Volume 12, Issue 8
- 609-628 Construction of the contingent valuation market in health care:a critical assessment
by Richard D. Smith - 629-636 The missing link: on the line between C and E
by Werner B.F. Brouwer & Frans F.H. Rutten - 637-654 The value of the change in health in Sweden 1980/81 to 1996/97
by Kristina Burström & Magnus Johannesson & Finn Diderichsen - 655-668 The TTO method and procedural invariance
by Anne Spencer - 669-684 Hospital efficiency targets
by Rowena Jacobs & Diane Dawson - 685-696 Public spending on health care and the poor
by Sanjeev Gupta & Marijn Verhoeven & Erwin R. Tiongson - 697-702 Methodological issues raised by preference‐based approaches to measuring the health status of children
by Stavros Petrou
July 2003, Volume 12, Issue 7
- 517-527 Design and analysis of unit cost estimation studies: How many hospital diagnoses? How many countries?
by Henry A. Glick & Sean M. Orzol & Joseph F. Tooley & Daniel Polsky & Josephine O. Mauskopf - 529-544 Logical inconsistencies in survey respondents' health state valuations ‐ a methodological challenge for estimating social tariffs
by Nancy J. Devlin & Paul Hansen & Paul Kind & Alan Williams - 545-551 An inquiry into the different perspectives that can be used when eliciting preferences in health
by Paul Dolan & Jan Abel Olsen & Paul Menzel & Jeff Richardson - 553-564 Health‐seeking behaviour and rural/urban variation in Kazakhstan
by Robin Thompson & Nigel Miller & Sophie Witter - 565-586 Price elasticity and pharmaceutical selection: the influence of managed care
by Marisa Elena Domino & David S. Salkever - 587-599 Demand for private health insurance: how important is the quality gap?
by Joan Costa & Jaume Garcia - 601-608 Allocating health care resources when people are risk averse with respect to life time
by Michael Hoel
June 2003, Volume 12, Issue 6
- 431-451 Estimation of the determinants of household health care expenditures in Nepal with controls for endogenous illness and provider choice
by Jeffrey J. Rous & David R. Hotchkiss - 453-464 A preliminary investigation of the effects of restrictions on Medicaid funding for abortions on female STD rates
by Bisakha Sen - 465-478 The labour market for nursing: a review of the labour supply literature
by Emanuela Antonazzo & Anthony Scott & Diane Skatun & Robert. F. Elliott - 479-491 Conjoint analysis. The cost variable: an Achilles' heel?
by Ulla Slothuus Skjoldborg & Dorte Gyrd‐Hansen - 493-504 The efficiency of health production: re‐estimating the WHO panel data using parametric and non‐parametric approaches to provide additional information
by Bruce Hollingsworth & John Wildman - 505-510 The person trade‐off method and the transitivity principle: an example from preferences over age weighting
by Paul Dolan & Aki Tsuchiya - 511-516 A note on the decomposition of the health concentration index
by Philip M. Clarke & Ulf‐G Gerdtham & Luke B. Connelly
May 2003, Volume 12, Issue 5
- 339-354 Risk selection and matching in performance‐based contracting
by Mingshan Lu & Ching‐to Albert Ma & Lasheng Yuan - 355-366 A critique of the World Health Organisation's evaluation of health system performance
by Jeff Richardson & John Wildman & Iain K. Robertson - 367-376 Determinants of health care utilization by German sickness fund members ‐ with application to risk adjustment
by Friedrich Breyer & Martin Heineck & Normann Lorenz - 377-392 Missing.... presumed at random: cost‐analysis of incomplete data
by Andrew Briggs & Taane Clark & Jane Wolstenholme & Philip Clarke - 393-402 Threats to the estimation of benefit: are preference elicitation methods accurate?
by Andrew J Lloyd - 403-414 A bibliometric analysis of health economics articles in the economics literature: 1991‐2000
by Rose M. Rubin & Cyril F. Chang - 415-419 Measles vaccination improves the equity of health outcomes: evidence from Bangladesh
by David Bishaia & Michael Koenig & Mehrab Ali Khan - 421-427 Stratified cost‐effectiveness analysis: a framework for establishing efficient limited use criteria
by Douglas Coyle & Martin J. Buxton & Bernie J. O'Brien - 429-429 Health Economics: An International Perspective, by Barbara Mcpake, Lilani Kumaranayake and Charles Normand. Routledge, London and New York, 2002. No. of pages: 260. ISBN 0‐415‐27736‐1
by Dave Whynes - 430-430 Advances in Health Economics, by Anthony Scott, Alan Maynard and Robert Elliott (Eds). John Wiley and Sons Ltd, Chichester, 2002. No. of pages: xxi+249. ISBN 0‐470‐84883‐9
by Alan Williams
April 2003, Volume 12, Issue 4
- 255-267 Does it matter who you are or what you gain? an experimental study of preferences for resource allocation
by David L.B. Schwappach - 269-280 Health status and heterogeneity of cost‐sharing responsiveness: how do sick people respond to cost‐sharing?
by Dahlia K. Remler & Adam J. Atherly - 281-294 Design techniques for stated preference methods in health economics
by Fredrik Carlsson & Peter Martinsson - 295-307 Revisiting the axiom of completeness in health care
by Mandy Ryan & Fernando San Miguel - 309-321 The changing public/private mix in dentistry in the UK–a supply‐side perspective
by Mauricea Lynch & Michael Calnan - 323-334 Measuring the value of time for methadone maintenance clients: willingness to pay, willingness to accept, and the wage rate
by Natalia N. Borisova & Allen C. Goodman - 335-335 Econometric analysis of health data, by Andrew Jones and Owen O'Donnell (eds). John Wiley & Sons Ltd, Chichester, 2002. No. of pages: 233. ISBN 0 470 84145 1
by John Mullahy
March 2003, Volume 12, Issue 3
- 171-186 An exploratory instrumental variable analysis of the outcomes of localized breast cancer treatments in a medicare population
by Jack Hadley & Daniel Polsky & Jeanne S. Mandelblatt & Jean M. Mitchell & Jane C. Weeks & Qin Wang & Yi‐Ting Hwang & OPTIONS Research Team - 187-198 Preferences and person trade‐offs: forcing consistency or inconsistency in health‐related quality of life measures?
by Edward C. Mansley & Elamin H. Elbasha - 199-215 The interaction between cost‐management and learning for major surgical procedures – lessons from asymmetric information
by Christian M. Ernst - 217-230 The effect of cigarette prices on youth smoking
by Hana Ross & Frank J. Chaloupka - 231-246 Medical care use and selection in a social health insurance with an equalization fund: evidence from Colombia
by Antonio J. Trujillo - 247-250 A note on cost‐value analysis
by Lars Peter Østerdal - 251-253 Comments to ‘a note on cost‐value analysis’
by Erik Nord & José Luis Pinto & Jeff Richardson & Paul Menzel & Peter Ubel
February 2003, Volume 12, Issue 2
- 87-100 A cost‐minimisation study of alternative discharge policies after hip fracture repair
by Johan J. Polder & Romke van Balen & Ewout W. Steyerberg & Herman J.M. Cools & J. Dik F. Habbema - 101-112 Medical student indebtedness and the propensity to enter academic medicine
by Marc Fox - 113-124 The determinants of health care expenditure: testing pooling restrictions in small samples
by Helmut Herwartz & Bernd Theilen - 125-138 Deadweight loss of bacterial resistance due to overtreatment
by Elamin H. Elbasha - 139-148 How measures of perception from survey data lead to inconsistent regression results: evidence from adolescent and peer substance use
by Edward C. Norton & Richard C. Lindrooth & Susan T. Ennett - 149-158 Managed care and technical efficiency
by H. Shelton Brown - 159-162 Determining the optimal combinations of mutually exclusive interventions: a response to Hutubessy and colleagues
by Douglas Coyle - 163-164 Formal response to ‘Determining the optimal combinations of mutually exclusive interventions: a response to Hutubessy and colleagues’
by Rob M.P.M. Baltussen & Raymond C.W. Hutubessy & Jan J. Barendregt & David B. Evans & Christopher J.L. Murray - 165-169 Double discounting of QALYs
by Linda D. MacKeigan & Amiram Gafni & Bernie J. O'Brien
January 2003, Volume 12, Issue 1
- 1-2 Announcement and Editorial
by John Hutton & Andrew Jones & Alan Maynard - 3-16 Estimating the monetary value of health care: lessons from environmental economics
by Nick Hanley & Mandy Ryan & Robert Wright - 17-31 A utility‐theoretic model for QALYs and willingness to pay
by Thomas Klose - 33-49 Assessing and comparing costs: how robust are the bootstrap and methods based on asymptotic normality?
by Anthony O'Hagan & John W. Stevens - 51-64 Eliciting several willingness to pay in a single contingent valuation survey: application to health care
by Stéphane Luchini & Christel Protière & Jean‐Paul Moatti - 65-66 Comment on Amartya Sen's ‘why health equity’
by Alan Williams - 67-73 How important are economic factors in choice of medical specialty?
by James Thornton & Fred Esposto - 75-76 Book Review
by John Appleby
December 2002, Volume 11, Issue 8
- 659-666 Why health equity?
by Amartya Sen - 667-677 Reducing avoidable inequalities in health: a new criterion for setting health care capitation payments
by Katharina Hauck & Rebecca Shaw & Peter C. Smith - 679-693 QALY‐maximisation and public preferences: results from a general population survey
by Stirling Bryan & Tracy Roberts & Chris Heginbotham & Alison McCallum - 695-708 A theoretical model of adolescent suicide and some evidence from US data
by Vijay K. Mathur & Donald G. Freeman - 709-722 The subjective costs of health losses due to chronic diseases. An alternative model for monetary appraisal
by Ada Ferrer‐i‐Carbonell & Bernard M.S. van Praag - 723-734 The importance of being first: evidence from Canadian generic pharmaceuticals
by Aidan Hollis - 735-739 Cost data for individual patients included in clinical studies: no amount of statistical analysis can compensate for inadequate costing methods
by Nicholas Graves & Damian Walker & Rosalind Raine & Andrew Hutchings & Jennifer A. Roberts
October 2002, Volume 11, Issue 7
- 571-584 Do competition and managed care improve quality?
by Nazmi Sari - 585-598 Revealed preference valuation compared to contingent valuation: radon‐induced lung cancer prevention
by Christine A. Kennedy - 599-622 A comparison of consensus and nonconsensus approaches to modeling contraceptive choice behavior
by Li‐Wei Chao