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Journal ArticleDOI

Discrete choice experiments of pharmacy services: a systematic review

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TLDR
A comprehensive review of discrete choice experiments for pharmacy services can be found in this article, where the authors provide an overview of key methodological developments in the design and analysis of discrete-choice experiments.
Abstract
Background Two previous systematic reviews have summarised the application of discrete choice experiments to value preferences for pharmacy services. These reviews identified a total of twelve studies and described how discrete choice experiments have been used to value pharmacy services but did not describe or discuss the application of methods used in the design or analysis. Aims (1) To update the most recent systematic review and critically appraise current discrete choice experiments of pharmacy services in line with published reporting criteria and; (2) To provide an overview of key methodological developments in the design and analysis of discrete choice experiments. Methods The review used a comprehensive strategy to identify eligible studies (published between 1990 and 2015) by searching electronic databases for key terms related to discrete choice and best-worst scaling (BWS) experiments. All healthcare choice experiments were then hand-searched for key terms relating to pharmacy. Data were extracted using a published checklist. Results A total of 17 discrete choice experiments eliciting preferences for pharmacy services were identified for inclusion in the review. No BWS studies were identified. The studies elicited preferences from a variety of populations (pharmacists, patients, students) for a range of pharmacy services. Most studies were from a United Kingdom setting, although examples from Europe, Australia and North America were also identified. Discrete choice experiments for pharmacy services tended to include more attributes than non-pharmacy choice experiments. Few studies reported the use of qualitative research methods in the design and interpretation of the experiments (n = 9) or use of new methods of analysis to identify and quantify preference and scale heterogeneity (n = 4). No studies reported the use of Bayesian methods in their experimental design. Conclusion Incorporating more sophisticated methods in the design of pharmacy-related discrete choice experiments could help researchers produce more efficient experiments which are better suited to valuing complex pharmacy services. Pharmacy-related discrete choice experiments could also benefit from more sophisticated analytical techniques such as investigations into scale and preference heterogeneity. Employing these sophisticated methods for both design and analysis could extend the usefulness of discrete choice experiments to inform health and pharmacy policy.

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Citations
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Discrete Choice Experiments in Health Economics: Past, Present and Future

TL;DR: The use of empirical DCEs in health economics continues to grow, however, inadequate reporting of methodological details inhibits quality assessment, which may reduce decision-makers’ confidence in results and their ability to act on the findings.
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Using Latent Class Analysis to Model Preference Heterogeneity in Health: A Systematic Review.

TL;DR: Advice is needed to improve the quality of applications of segmentation methods in health to support policy development and clinical practice and to inform future studies by identifying current norms in published applications.
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Young Women's Stated Preferences for Biomedical HIV Prevention: Results of a Discrete Choice Experiment in Kenya and South Africa.

TL;DR: This paper conducted a discrete choice experiment survey with 536 women aged 18-30 years to assess preferences for hypothetical HIV prevention products characterized by the attributes of efficacy, pregnancy prevention, delivery form, dosing frequency, and side effects.
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Preferences for long-acting Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV prevention among South African youth: Results of a discrete choice experiment

TL;DR: The iPrevent Study examined youths’ preferences for key attributes of long‐acting Pre‐Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP), with a focus on characteristics pertinent to product delivery alongside key modifiable product attributes.
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Patient preferences for healthcare delivery through community pharmacy settings in the USA: A discrete choice study.

TL;DR: The study aim was to gauge patient preferences explicitly for primary healthcare services that could be delivered through community pharmacy settings in the USA, using a very large sample to accommodate multiple service delivery options.
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