Pregnant women's and policymakers' preferences for the expansion of noninvasive prenatal screening: A discrete choice experiment approach study

Author:

Nguyen Hung Manh1ORCID,Baradaran Mohammad2ORCID,Daigle Gaétan3,Nshimyumukiza Leon45ORCID,Guertin Jason Robert16ORCID,Reinharz Daniel1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Département de médecine sociale et préventive Université Laval Québec Canada

2. Département de génie électrique et de génie informatique Université Laval Québec Canada

3. Département de mathématiques et de statistique Université Laval Québec Canada

4. Institut national d'excellence en santé et en services sociaux Québec Canada

5. Faculté des sciences infirmières Université Laval Québec Canada

6. Centre de Recherche du CHU de Québec Université Laval Québec Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackground and AimsQuantitative approaches for eliciting preferences for new interventions are mostly conducted by patients and rarely by policymakers. This study aimed to quantify the preferences of pregnant women and policymakers regarding the addition of a new test to prenatal screening programs for detecting chromosomal abnormalities.MethodsA discrete choice experiment was conducted to measure the respondents' preferences for a new prenatal test. A seven‐attribute instrument was built based on interviews with pregnant women and policymakers. The data were analyzed using robust conditional logistic regression and nested logit models.ResultsIn total, 272 pregnant women and 24 policymakers completed the questionnaire (response rates of 48% and 55%, respectively). Overall, all attributes were statistically significant in the pregnant women group, whereas only three attributes (test performance, degree of test result certainty, and cost) were statistically significant in the policymakers group. Statistically significant differences in test performance and information were observed between the two groups.ConclusionPolicymakers differed from pregnant women in their appraisal of attributes related to their preference for a new prenatal screening intervention. The low response rates observed in both groups suggest that further investigation of the relevance of this approach must be conducted.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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