1 / 9

Quality of life and subjective well-being

Quality of life and subjective well-being. Paul Dolan Director, Centre for Well Being in Public Policy University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK [But soon to be Imperial College London]. What could I possibly know that you lot don’t know already?.

Télécharger la présentation

Quality of life and subjective well-being

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Quality of life and subjective well-being Paul Dolan Director, Centre for Well Being in Public Policy University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK [But soon to be Imperial College London]

  2. What could I possibly know that you lot don’t know already? • How could information on SWB play into public policy? • I’ll give you ten reasons why policy-makers should use SWB • What difference would SWB make in the health sector? • I’ll give some idea of the difference between QALYs and WALYs • What type of SWB should we use? • I’ll show some differences between LS and DRM • And what do the public make of all this? • I’ll show you some pilot data

  3. Ten reasons for SWB in policy • Enriching the informational base of policy making • Added information in hard to choose cases • Providing a means for assessing subjective states • Some are measured anyway (e.g. fear of crime) • Aiding prediction of objective policy outcomes • Health (even exposure to cold), productivity etc. • Aiding prediction of behaviours and choices • Suicide, pro-social behaviour etc. • Testing assumptions about revealed preferences • Paradox of choice

  4. Ten reasons for SWB in policy • Testing assumptions about stated preferences • Focusing effect, false theories of well-being etc. • Aiding valuation of hard to quantify costs and benefits • Hedonic pricing • Helping to set policy ‘defaults’ • Criterion for libertarian paternalism • Fostering joined-up government • An alternative to a money metric • The psychological Heisenberg principle • What society measures influences things it seeks

  5. Valuation in health • Decision utility central to attempts to value health • e.g. WTP, SG, TTO • Imagine living in health state, H, for ten years: • moderate pain or discomfort; moderately anxious or depressed • Alternatively you could take a gamble: • full health if successful, death if not • What p (and 1-p) make you indifferent? • UH = p[FH] + (1-p)[D] = p • Values used by NICE to calculate cost-per-QALY

  6. What difference would SWB make? Pain is not as bad as forecast but mental health problems are worse

  7. But what type of SWB should we use? Life sat U-index Sleep hours 0.23 0.19 Depressed -0.36 -0.38 Optimistic 0.23 0.22 BMI -0.13 -0.01 Income 0.32 0.12 Married 0.21 0.04 From Kahneman et al, American and French women DRM study (n=1600)

  8. Focusing effects • “Nothing is as important as when you’re thinking about it” • Life satisfaction ratings may pick up those things we think are important to us at the time of the assessment • But do they pick up those things that affect us as we live our lives?

  9. The focus of policy Which of our measures (if any) pick up what citizens consider to the legitimate role of public policy? The main goal of government … • Improving happiness • Providing public services • Reducing misery • Supporting close social networks • Choice in public services -3 = strongly disagree 3 = strongly agree

More Related