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Public engagement in setting healthcare priorities: a ranking exercise in Cyprus
Authors:Antonis Farmakas  Mamas Theodorou  Petros Galanis  Georgios Karayiannis  Stefanos Ghobrial  Nikos Polyzos  Evridiki Papastavrou  Eirini Agapidaki  Kyriakos Souliotis
Affiliation:1.Department of Life and Health Sciences,University of Nicosia,Nicosia,Cyprus;2.Faculty of Economics and Management,Open University of Cyprus,Nicosia,Cyprus;3.Research Associate Center for Health Services Management and Evaluation, Faculty of Nursing,University of Athens,Athens,Greece;4.University of Nicosia,Nicosia,Cyprus;5.School of Medicine,East Anglia University,Norwich,UK;6.Department of Social Administration and Political Science,Democritus University of Thrace,Komotini,Greece;7.Department of Nursing,Cyprus University of Technology,Limassol,Cyprus;8.Centre for Health Services Research, Department of Hygiene, Epidemiology and Medical Statistics, Medical School,University of Athens,Athens,Greece;9.Faculty of Social and Political Sciences,University of Peloponnese,Corinth,Greece
Abstract:

Background

In countries such as Cyprus the financial crisis and the recession have severely affected the funding and priority setting of the health care system. There is evidence highlighting the importance of population’ preferences in designing priorities for health care settings. Although public preferences have been thorough analysed in many countries, there is a research gap in terms of simultaneously investigating the relative importance and the weight of differing and competing criteria for determining healthcare priority settings. The main objective of the study was tο investigate public preferences for the relative utility and weight of differing and competing criteria for health care priority setting in Cyprus.

Methods

The ‘conjoint analysis’ technique was applied to develop a ranking exercise. The aim of the study was to identify the preferences of the participants for alternative options. Participants were asked to grade in a priority order 16 hypothetical case scenarios of patients with different disease and of diverse socio-economic characteristics awaiting treatment. The sample was purposive and consisted of 100 Cypriots, selected from public locations all over the country.

Results

It was revealed that the “severity of the disease” and the “age of the patient” were the key prioritization criteria. Participants assigned the smallest relative value to the criterion “healthy lifestyle”. More precisely, participants older than 35 years old assigned higher relative importance to “age”, while younger participants to the “severity of the disease”. The “healthy lifestyle” criterion was assigned to the lowest relative importance to by all participants.

Conclusion

In Cyprus, public participation in health care priority setting is almost inexistent. Nonetheless, it seems that the public’s participation in this process could lead to a wider acceptance of the healthcare system especially as a result of the financial crisis and the upcoming reforms implemented such as the establishment of the General System of Health Insurance.
Keywords:
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