Article
Details
Citation
Comerford DA, Tufte-Hewett A & Bridger EK (2024) Public preferences to trade-off gains in total health for health equality: Discrepancies between an abstract scenario versus the real-world scenario presented by COVID-19. Rationality and Society, 36 (1), pp. 66-92. https://doi.org/10.1177/10434631231193599
Abstract
Policymakers must ration healthcare. This necessity became salient during the COVID-19 pandemic. Some policymakers took that opportunity to reduce inequality of health outcomes at the expense of overall health gains. There is a literature that seeks to quantify the optimal trade-off between efficiency and equality in health outcomes: economists employ surveys to quantify the public¡¯s preferred level of equity/efficiency trade-off. An odd result from these studies is that a non-trivial subsample of respondents choose to ¡°level down¡± i.e., they choose as though an additional year of life delivers negative utility to society if it accrues to the most privileged. In an experiment of US and UK respondents (n = 495), we compare equity/efficiency trade-offs across an abstract scenario along the lines of that presented in previous surveys versus a COVID-19 scenario, where it is made explicit that healthcare rationing is a real and current necessity occasioned by the pandemic. We find that preference for ¡°levelling down¡± is reduced in the COVID-19 scenario relative to the abstract scenario. This result implies that, at least in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, previous results have overestimated the public¡¯s willingness to sacrifice overall gains in population health in order to reduce inequality of health outcomes.
Keywords
Social Sciences (miscellaneous); Sociology and Political Science
Journal
Rationality and Society: Volume 36, Issue 1
Status | Published |
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Funders | |
Publication date | 29/02/2024 |
Publication date online | 07/08/2023 |
Date accepted by journal | 01/03/2023 |
URL | |
Publisher | SAGE Publications |
ISSN | 1043-4631 |
eISSN | 1461-7358 |
People (1)
Professor, Economics