Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10484605 | Value in Health | 2016 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Risk framing affects how respondents value the presented risk. Positive risk framing led to increased dominant decision-making behavior, whereas negative risk framing led to risk-seeking behavior. Attribute framing should have a prominent part in the expert and focus group interviews, and different types of framing should be used in the pilot version of DCEs as well as in actual DCEs to estimate the magnitude of the effect of choosing different types of framing.
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Authors
Jorien PhD, Brigitte A.B. PhD, Mattijs S. PhD, Carmen D. PhD, Henriette A. PhD, G. Ardine PhD,