Commentary

Author:

Palatucci John S.12,Chakravarty Sujoy1,Kratchman Amy L.3,Harris Jill4,Pizzi Laura T.56,Coffield Caroline N.27,Ibitamuno Grace7,Spitalnik Deborah M.27

Affiliation:

1. Rutgers Center for State Health Policy

2. Elizabeth M. Boggs Center on Developmental Disabilities, New Brunswick, NJ

3. Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA

4. Children’s Specialized Hospital, New Brunswick

5. ISPOR—The Professional Society for Health Economics and Outcomes Research, Lawrenceville

6. Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy, Piscataway

7. Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, NJ

Abstract

Background: The 2020–2029 strategic plan for the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Trust Fund calls for addressing data infrastructure gaps that are critical for studying issues around intellectual and developmental disabilities (I/DD). Specifically, the plan calls for data collection on economic factors that affect person-centered approaches to health care decision-making. Among people with I/DD and their caregivers, such economic factors may include financial costs of care, decreased opportunities for leisure and recreation, income losses associated with caregiving, and foregone opportunities for skill acquisition or other human capital investments. Objective: This commentary supports responsiveness to the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Trust Fund (PCORTF) calls by conceptualizing and operationalizing a framework for identifying preferences on economic factors that are relevant to people with I/DD and their caregivers. Main Arguments: The framework outlined in this commentary addresses barriers to data collection that hinder measure development in the study of I/DD. This work is significant and timely given the continued movement to integrate and maintain people with I/DD within communities and recent methodological advances for eliciting preferences among people with I/DD. Relevance to the Special Issue: Readers will be introduced to a framework for building data capacity in the study of economic outcomes among a population that is a high research priority for federal funding agencies. This commentary aims to be useful to researchers in planning, developing, and initiating projects in this area.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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