Nepalese Cancer Patients’ Willingness to Pay for Improved Quality of Life: A Choice Experiment Study
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Context and Data Collection
2.2. Discrete Choice Experiment Design
2.3. Empirical Strategy
2.4. Econometric Model
2.5. Welfare Measure
3. Results
3.1. Summary Statistics
3.2. Main Results
3.3. Marginal Willingness to Pay
3.4. Sensitivity Analysis
4. Discussion
5. Limitation
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Attributes | Levels |
---|---|
Pain | No pain; Moderate pain; No change in pain |
Depression | No depression; Moderate depression; No change in depression |
Mobility | No problems in mobility; Moderate problems in mobility; Confined to bed |
Self-care | No problems in self-care; Moderate problems in self-care; Unable to practice self-care |
Usual activities | No problems in performing usual activities; Moderate problems in performing usual activities; Unable to perform usual activities |
Cost | 0; 1000; 25,000; 50,000; 100,000; 175,000; 300,000; 500,000; 900,000; 1,200,000; 1,700,000; 2,500,000; 3,500,000 |
Variable | Average | Cancer Patients | Non-Cancer Patients |
---|---|---|---|
Age (in years) | 52.0 | 52.0 | 53.0 |
Patients | 70% | 30% | |
Inpatients (=1) | 16.0% | 15.0% | 20.0% |
Gender (Female = 1) | 58.0% | 61.0% | 52.0% |
Married | 80.0% | 82.0% | 76.0% |
Education | |||
No Schooling (=1) | 53.0% | 56.0% | 46.0% |
Bachelor’s (=1) | 2.0% | 1.0% | 4.5% |
Ethnicity | |||
Brahmin/Chhetri/Janajati | 75.0% | 69.0% | 89.0% |
Income | |||
<NRS 10,000 | 20.0% | 24.0% | 12.0% |
NRS 10,001 to NRS 30,000 | 55.0% | 55.0% | 54.0% |
>NRS 50,000 | 10.0% | 7.0% | 15.0% |
Variable | CL (1) | RPL | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cancer (2) | Non-Cancer (3) | ||||
Choice | Mean | SD | Mean | SD | |
ASC | −1.21 *** | −2.50 *** | 2.96 *** | −1.59 *** | 4.13 *** |
(0.10) | (0.23) | (0.27) | (0.34) | (0.54) | |
No change in pain | ref. | ref. | ref. | ref. | ref. |
Moderate pain | 0.55 *** | 1.08 *** | 0.62 * | 1.72 *** | 0.17 |
(0.08) | (0.15) | (0.35) | (0.31) | (0.15) | |
No pain | 0.92 *** | 1.56 *** | 0.00 | 2.73 *** | −0.59 |
(0.09) | (0.15) | (0.04) | (0.39) | (0.66) | |
No change in depression | ref. | ref. | ref. | ref. | ref. |
Moderate depression | 0.19 ** | 0.30 ** | 0.29 | 0.67 *** | 0.37 |
(0.08) | (0.13) | (0.39) | (0.26) | (0.38) | |
No depression | 0.60 *** | 0.83 *** | −1.07 *** | 1.20 *** | 1.31 *** |
(0.08) | (0.13) | (0.24) | (0.28) | (0.37) | |
Confined to bed | ref. | ref. | ref. | ref. | ref. |
Moderate problems in mobility | 0.43 *** | 0.79 *** | −0.01 | 0.96 *** | 1.67 *** |
(0.09) | (0.13) | (0.09) | (0.30) | (0.41) | |
No problems in mobility | 0.70 *** | 1.30 *** | −0.05 | 1.34 *** | −0.10 |
(0.09) | (0.16) | (0.03) | (0.32) | (0.29) | |
Unable to practice self-care | ref. | ref. | ref. | ref. | ref. |
Moderate problems in practicing self-care | 0.52 *** | 0.75 *** | −0.58 ** | 1.51 *** | 0.19 |
(0.09) | (0.15) | (0.28) | (0.34) | (0.12) | |
No problems in practicing self-care | 0.73 *** | 0.95 *** | −0.05 | 1.56 *** | 0.16 |
(0.08) | (0.13) | (0.07) | (0.33) | (0.17) | |
Unable to perform usual activities | ref. | ref. | ref. | ref. | ref. |
Moderate problems in performing usual activities | 0.59 *** | 1.29 *** | −1.10 *** | 1.67 *** | −0.22 |
(0.07) | (0.16) | (0.33) | (0.29) | (0.26) | |
No problems in performing usual activities | 0.92 *** | 1.72 *** | –0.54 | 2.73 *** | 2.41 *** |
(0.09) | (0.18) | (0.42) | (0.49) | (0.57) | |
Cost | −0.15 *** | −0.24 *** | −0.46 *** | ||
(0.02) | (0.02) | (0.08) | |||
N | 2730 | 2730 | 1173 |
Attribute | Cancer | Non-Cancer |
---|---|---|
Moderate pain | 445,105 (315,083–575,127) | 369,246 (221,942–516,549) |
No pain | 639,670 (500,291–779,048) | 587,631 (405,651–769,610) |
Depression | ||
Moderate depression | 121,540 (18,954–224,126) | 144,660 (29,409–259,910) |
No depression | 342,072 (232,074–452,070) | 257,745 (120,485–395,005) |
Mobility | ||
Moderate problem | 323,782 (209,111–438,453) | 207,256 (58,227–356,285) |
No problem | 532,864 (390,298–675,430) | 287,531 (125,227–449,834) |
Self-care | ||
Moderate problem | 307,240 (187,138–427,341) | 326,065 (180,603–471,528) |
No problem | 389,159 (279,284–499,035) | 334,831 (189,941–479,721) |
Usual activities | ||
Moderate problem | 528,620 (393,334–663,907) | 358,767 (215,243–502,291) |
No problem | 707,086 (560,442–853,730) | 587,100 (375,214–798,986) |
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Shahid, A.; Bohara, A. Nepalese Cancer Patients’ Willingness to Pay for Improved Quality of Life: A Choice Experiment Study. Healthcare 2025, 13, 1645. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13141645
Shahid A, Bohara A. Nepalese Cancer Patients’ Willingness to Pay for Improved Quality of Life: A Choice Experiment Study. Healthcare. 2025; 13(14):1645. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13141645
Chicago/Turabian StyleShahid, Adnan, and Alok Bohara. 2025. "Nepalese Cancer Patients’ Willingness to Pay for Improved Quality of Life: A Choice Experiment Study" Healthcare 13, no. 14: 1645. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13141645
APA StyleShahid, A., & Bohara, A. (2025). Nepalese Cancer Patients’ Willingness to Pay for Improved Quality of Life: A Choice Experiment Study. Healthcare, 13(14), 1645. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13141645