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Patient Prefer Adher · Jan 2014
Willingness to pay for ovulation induction treatment in case of WHO II anovulation: a study using the contingent valuation method.
- Thomas G Poder, Jie He, Catherine Simard, and Jean-Charles Pasquier.
- UETMIS and CRCHUS, CHUS, Sherbrooke, QC, Canada.
- Patient Prefer Adher. 2014 Jan 1; 8: 1337-46.
ObjectiveTo measure the willingness to pay (WTP) of women aged 18-45 years to receive drug treatment for ovulation induction (ie, the social value of normal cycles of ovulation for a woman of childbearing age) in order to feed the debate about the funding of fertility cares.SettingAn anonymous questionnaire was used over the general population of Quebec.ParticipantsA total of 136 subjects were recruited in three medical clinics, and 191 subjects through an online questionnaire.MethodTHE QUESTIONNAIRE CONSISTED OF THREE PARTS: introduction to the problematic, socioeconomic data collection to determine factors influencing the formation of WTP, and a WTP question using the simple bid price dichotomous choice elicitation technique. The econometric estimation method is based on the "random utility theory." Each subject responding to our questionnaire could express her uncertainty about the answer to our WTP question by choosing the answer "I do not know."Outcome MeasureThe WTP in Canadian dollars of women aged 18-45 years to receive drug treatment for ovulation induction.ResultsResults are positive and indicate an average WTP exceeding 4,800 CAD, which is much more than the drug treatment cost. There is no evidence of sample frame bias or avidity bias across the two survey modes that cannot be controlled in econometric estimates.ConclusionMedical treatment for ovulation induction is highly socially desirable in Quebec.
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