91视频

02 November 2023

Emotions tend to get the upper hand in healthcare decisions. This is shown in a 91视频 study, where participants were faced with tough choices between different treatments. The results may explain why effective use of healthcare resources is so slow in the making, according to the researchers.

Portrait of professor Gustav Tingh枚g.
Emotions tend to give more of a tunnel vision,鈥 says Gustav Tinghög Photographer: Jonas Roslund

鈥淓motions make it more difficult for us to see the value of alternative ways of using resources. We get more of a tunnel vision,鈥 says Gustav Tingh枚g, professor in the Department of Management and Engineering at Link枚ping University.

The study, published in the scientific journal Judgment and Decision Making, featured two groups, one consisting of just over 1,200 members of the public, and the other of 183 healthcare experts.

The cost of safety

First, the groups had to evaluate a number of pairs of medical treatments, where the only difference between the treatments in each pair was that one of the options carried a somewhat higher risk of serious side effects or death.
The cost of the more risky treatment was given. The participants were tasked with pricing the risk-free option high enough to make both options equal.

鈥淵ou could put an infinite price, but people don鈥檛, they have a decent ability to set a price on what they think patient security is worth,鈥 says Gustav Tingh枚g.

What participants did not know was that in the next step they would be forced to choose between the treatments in the pairs. As they had themselves set a price that made the options equal, you might think that the choice would not matter. In that case, the outcome would be 50/50.

But in reality, we are not that consistent.

Woman holding medicines. Photo credit PeopleImages

Emotions take over

In a scenario involving two cancer drugs, one of which had a one percent risk of causing death, 90 percent of the general public group chose the risk-free, but more expensive, option. In another scenario, involving two treatments for spinal disk herniation, one with a two percent risk of causing paralysis, 94 percent chose the more expensive, risk-free option.

The conclusion drawn by the researchers is that when we are faced with a choice, there are values that almost always win. Patient safety is such a value. The reason for this is that when making a decision we have to justify it to ourselves, and we also risk being held accountable. This is where emotions take over. We take the decisions we find easiest to justify.

What the researchers were surprised to find was that the effect was almost as strong in the expert group. In the cancer drug scenario, 81 percent chose the more expensive, risk-free option. And in the spinal disk herniation case, a staggering 86 percent chose the safe option.

It鈥檚 not about putting a price on a life

The consequence of this is that resources may not be used in an optimal way. Money spent on minimising all imaginable risk could have been used elsewhere. Patient safety always takes precedence, even though it might have been possible to provide more welfare or utility by prioritising something else. According to Gustav Tingh枚g, our tendency to let emotions rule is noticeable in the healthcare debate. Throwing in arguments such as patient safety is an effective way to end discussion.

He stresses that emotions are not bad by definition when we make decisions. What decides if you are a good policy maker is whether you can combine your emotions with rational thinking.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not about putting a price on a life, it鈥檚 about how we can get the most possible health for the limited resources we have,鈥 says Gustav Tingh枚g.

The study was funded by the Swedish Research Council and Forte.

Translation: Anneli Mosell

Research

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