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Willingness to pay for risky lifestyles: results from the Pay for Others (PAY4O) study, Italy
We assess the individual willingness to pay for diseases arising from risky lifestyles and investigate the personal factors that influence such willingness. We conducted an online survey with 821 respondents in Italy. The questionnaire was distributed via Facebook® in July and August 2016. The quest...
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Published in: | Public health (London) 2020-05, Vol.182, p.179-184 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | We assess the individual willingness to pay for diseases arising from risky lifestyles and investigate the personal factors that influence such willingness.
We conducted an online survey with 821 respondents in Italy. The questionnaire was distributed via Facebook® in July and August 2016. The questionnaire covered sociodemographic characteristics, health status, behaviour and psychological attitudes, economic status, and opinion about covering the healthcare costs related to overeating, unhealthy diet, sedentary lifestyles, alcohol abuse, tobacco smoking, driving under the influence of alcohol, and illegal drug use by.
We performed the following: (1) the study of the patterns in the dependent variables by principal component analysis; (2) analysis of the determinants by Holdout Variable Importance measure obtained in Random Forest; and (3) we used ordered logit models.
Participants agreed with the idea that public health care should be provided for problems arising from bad eating habits and sedentary lifestyle (50.4%), whereas the health care consequences of the other risky behaviours should not be publicly financed by the Italian National Health Service.
Our study gives an overview of the willingness to pay of a population living in a country where financing of the Health Service is based on general taxation. So, these results may be generalized, with due caution, to all the countries where the Health Service offers universal coverage and is operated by the government, but of course not to scenarios related to market-based or social health insurance systems.
•Healthcare costs require the assessment of the willingness to pay.•People show willingness to pay for eating and sedentary lifestyle risks.•People do not want to pay for behaviours that harm others. |
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ISSN: | 0033-3506 1476-5616 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.puhe.2020.01.022 |