PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Patient preferences and willingness-to-pay for a home or clinic based program of chronic heart failure management: findings from the Which? trial.

  • Jennifer A Whitty,
  • Simon Stewart,
  • Melinda J Carrington,
  • Alicia Calderone,
  • Thomas Marwick,
  • John D Horowitz,
  • Henry Krum,
  • Patricia M Davidson,
  • Peter S Macdonald,
  • Christopher Reid,
  • Paul A Scuffham

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0058347
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 3
p. e58347

Abstract

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BackgroundBeyond examining their overall cost-effectiveness and mechanisms of effect, it is important to understand patient preferences for the delivery of different modes of chronic heart failure management programs (CHF-MPs). We elicited patient preferences around the characteristics and willingness-to-pay (WTP) for a clinic or home-based CHF-MP.Methodology/principal findingsA Discrete Choice Experiment was completed by a sub-set of patients (n = 91) enrolled in the WHICH? trial comparing home versus clinic-based CHF-MP. Participants provided 5 choices between hypothetical clinic and home-based programs varying by frequency of nurse consultations, nurse continuity, patient costs, and availability of telephone or education support. Participants (aged 71±13 yrs, 72.5% male, 25.3% NYHA class III/IV) displayed two distinct preference classes. A latent class model of the choice data indicated 56% of participants preferred clinic delivery, access to group CHF education classes, and lower cost programs (pConclusions/significancePatient preferences for CHF-MPs were dichotomised between a home-based model which is more likely to suit older patients, those who live alone, and those with a lower household income; and a clinic-based model which is more likely to suit those who are more socially active and wealthier. To optimise the delivery of CHF-MPs, health care services should consider their patients' preferences when designing CHF-MPs.