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The role of heterogeneity of patients’ preferences in kidney transplantation

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posted on 2025-07-09, 10:52 authored by Mesfin GenieMesfin Genie, A Nicoló, G Pasini
We elicit time and risk preferences for kidney transplantation from the entire population of patients of the largest Italian transplant centre using a discrete choice experiment (DCE). We measure patients’ willingness-to-wait (WTW) for receiving a kidney with one-year longer expected graft survival, or a low risk of complication. Using a mixed logit in WTW-space model, we find heterogeneity in patients’ preferences. Our model allows WTW to vary with patients’ age and duration of dialysis. The results suggest that WTW correlates with age and duration of dialysis, and that accounting for patients’ preferences in the design of kidney allocation protocols could increase their welfare. The implication for transplant practice is that eliciting patients’ preferences could help in the allocation of “non-ideal” kidneys.

Funding

The authors wish to thank Noemi Pace and Lorenzo Rocco for helpful comments; Paolo Pellizzari for helping with the simulation; Giacomo Battiston and Veronica Buizza for excellent assistance in the implementation of the experiment. This project has been completed in collaboration with the team of surgeons of the Transplant Unit of the University of Padova Hospital, particularly Paolo Rigotti and Lucrezia Furian, who collaborate with us on thedesign of the DCE experiment. The authors are grateful to Mandy Ryan and participants of the HESG at the University of Aberdeen, to Nathalie P. Fleury and participants in the EuHEA in Lausanne, to participants in the EEEA-ESEM 2017 conference in Lisbon, iHEA 2017 conference in Boston, to seminar participants in Venice, Padova and VIVE Copenaghen (DK), and to Sebastian Heidenreich and other participants in the health economics research unit (HERU) stated preference seminar at the University of Aberdeen for their comments. We would also like to thank Daniel Rigby (The University of Manchester) and Jurgen Maurer (Universite de Lausanne) for their time, interest, and helpful comments. This work was supported by the "Progetto di Ateneo KIDNEY" from the University of Padua.

"Progetto di Ateneo KIDNEY" from the University of Padua

History

Related Materials

Journal title

Journal of Health Economics

Location

Netherlands

Volume

72

Article number

ARTN 102331

Page count

22

Publisher

ELSEVIER

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

College of Human and Social Futures

School

Newcastle Business School