Whitty Jennifer A, Ratcliffe Julie, Kendall Elizabeth, Burton Paul, Wilson Andrew, Littlejohns Peter, Harris Paul, Krinks Rachael, Scuffham Paul A
Faculty of Health and Behavioural Sciences, School of Pharmacy, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland, Australia.
Flinders Health Economics Group, School of Medicine, Flinders University, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
BMJ Open. 2015 Oct 15;5(10):e008919. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-008919.
To derive priority weights for access to bariatric surgery for obese adults, from the perspective of the public.
Australian public hospital system.
Adults (N=1994), reflecting the age and gender distribution of Queensland and South Australia.
A discrete choice experiment in which respondents indicated which of two individuals with different characteristics should be prioritised for surgery in repeated hypothetical choices. Potential surgery recipients were described by seven key characteristics or attributes: body mass index (BMI), presence of comorbid conditions, age, family history, commitment to lifestyle change, time on the surgical wait list and chance of maintaining weight loss following surgery. A multinomial logit model was used to evaluate preferences and derive priority weights (primary analysis), with a latent class model used to explore respondent characteristics that were associated with variation in preference across the sample (see online supplementary analysis).
A preference was observed to prioritise individuals who demonstrated a strong commitment to maintaining a healthy lifestyle as well as individuals categorised with very severe (BMI≥50 kg/m2) or (to a lesser extent) severe (BMI≥40 kg/m2) obesity, those who already have obesity-related comorbidity, with a family history of obesity, with a greater chance of maintaining weight loss or who had spent a longer time on the wait list. Lifestyle commitment was considered to be more than twice as important as any other criterion. There was little tendency to prioritise according to the age of the recipient. Respondent preferences were dependent on their BMI, previous experience with weight management surgery, current health state and education level.
This study extends our understanding of the publics' preferences for priority setting to the context of bariatric surgery, and derives priority weights that could be used to assist bodies responsible for commissioning bariatric services.
从公众角度得出肥胖成年人接受减肥手术的优先权重。
澳大利亚公立医院系统。
1994名成年人,反映昆士兰和南澳大利亚的年龄和性别分布。
一项离散选择实验,在重复的假设选择中,受访者指出两个具有不同特征的个体中哪一个应优先接受手术。潜在手术接受者由七个关键特征或属性描述:体重指数(BMI)、合并症的存在、年龄、家族病史、对生活方式改变的承诺、手术等待名单上的时间以及手术后维持体重减轻的机会。使用多项logit模型评估偏好并得出优先权重(主要分析),使用潜在类别模型探索与样本中偏好差异相关的受访者特征(见在线补充分析)。
观察到一种偏好,即优先考虑那些对保持健康生活方式表现出强烈承诺的个体,以及被归类为非常严重(BMI≥50 kg/m2)或(在较小程度上)严重(BMI≥40 kg/m2)肥胖的个体、已经患有肥胖相关合并症的个体、有肥胖家族病史的个体、有更大机会维持体重减轻的个体或在等待名单上花费更长时间的个体。生活方式承诺被认为比任何其他标准重要两倍以上。几乎没有根据接受者年龄进行优先排序的倾向。受访者的偏好取决于他们的BMI、以前的体重管理手术经验、当前健康状况和教育水平。
本研究将我们对公众在减肥手术背景下优先排序偏好的理解扩展到了新的范围,并得出了可用于协助负责委托减肥服务的机构的优先权重。