Find-Health-Articles.com - making medical research available to everyone
Research article summary (published 30 Aug 2002):

Your money or your health: time preferences and trading money for health.

Full Abstract

BACKGROUND:
Time preferences reflect how future outcomes are valued relative to present ones. Previous research has found that time preferences for one domain (say, money) are inconsistent (uncorrelated) with those from another (say, health). The present studies evaluated whether this domain independence was due to decision makers' sensitivity to a normatively appropriate principle about the tradability of health and money.

METHOD:
Participants read a scenario in which health and money were described as tradable or not tradable and then responded to hypothetical intertemporal trade-off questions. RESULTS. In experiment 1, participants showed higher agreement between health and money time preferences in the tradable condition, as predicted. In experiment 2, participants responded from either an individual decision maker or policy maker perspective. Perspective had little effect on agreement between health and money discount rates, but there was again higher agreement in the tradable as compared to the not-tradable condition.

CONCLUSION:
Previous demonstrations of domain independence may have been due in part to decision makers' assumption that health and money are not tradable.

 

Learn Faster Today      Improve your study skills

Author information

Author/s: Chapman, Gretchen B (GB);

Affiliation: Department of Psychology, Rutgers University, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854-8020, USA. gbc@rci.rutgers.edu

Journal and publication information

Publication Type: Journal Article; Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

Journal: Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making (Med Decis Making), published in United States. (Language: eng)

Reference: -2002 Sep-Oct; vol 22 (issue 5) : pp 410-6

Dates: Created 2002/10/07; Completed 2003/01/31; Revised 2006/11/15;

PMID: 12365483, status: MEDLINE (last retrieval date: 11/6/2008)

Sourced from the National Library of Medicine. Abstract text and other information may be subject to copyright.

External Links for this article (including full text providers, if available):

Click Electronic Full-text Provider Links to see options for finding the electronic full text links to this article. Note there may be a subscription or fee required for access to the full text. See our FAQ for information on finding FREE full text articles.

This article may also be located in paper journal collections available in many libraries. Use the Journal and Publication Information above to find the full article.

MeSH headings (categories)

This article was linked to the MESH Headings shown below.

Related articles

This article has not been indexed for related articles as yet, however you can still use the live related article search links below.

See 100+ related articles.

See a large map of 100+ related articles.

© Advanogy.com 2003-2008 - All rights reserved. Terms of Use | Contact Us | Index