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dc.contributor.author Mouter, Niek
dc.contributor.author Geijsen, Tom
dc.contributor.author Munyasya, Aylin
dc.contributor.author Hernandez, Jose Ignacio
dc.contributor.author Korthals, Daniel
dc.contributor.author Stok, Marijn
dc.contributor.author Uiters, Ellen
dc.contributor.author de Bruin, Marijn
dc.date.accessioned 2026-02-08T03:22:06Z
dc.date.available 2026-02-08T03:22:06Z
dc.date.issued 2025
dc.identifier.issn 1178-1653
dc.identifier.other Mendeley: 25e13fb5-ef56-38a7-b78c-7cfa92fce4d2
dc.identifier.uri https://repositorio.uss.cl/handle/uss/20247
dc.description Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2024.
dc.description.abstract Background: The stage of the pandemic significantly affects people’s preferences for (the societal impacts of) COVID-19 policies. No discrete choice experiments were conducted when the COVID-19 pandemic was in a transition phase. Objectives: This is the first study to empirically investigate how citizens weigh the key societal impacts of pandemic policies when the COVID-19 pandemic transitions into an endemic. Methods: We performed two discrete choice experiments among 2181 Dutch adults that included six attributes: COVID-19 deaths, physical health problems, mental health problems, financial problems, surgery delays and the degree to which individual liberties are restricted. We used latent class choice models to identify heterogeneous preferences for the impacts of COVID-19 measures across different groups of respondents. Results: A large majority of the participants in this study was willing to accept deaths to avoid that citizens experience physical complaints, mental health issues, financial problems and the postponement of surgeries. The willingness to tolerate COVID-19 deaths to avoid these societal impacts differed substantially between participants. When participants were provided with information about the stringency of COVID-19 measures, they assigned relatively less value to preventing the postponement of non-urgent surgeries for 1–3 months across all classes. Conclusions: Having gone through a pandemic, most Dutch citizens clearly prefer pandemic policies that consider citizens’ financial situations, physical problems, mental health problems and individual liberties, alongside the effects on excess mortality and pressure on healthcare. en
dc.language.iso eng
dc.relation.ispartof vol. 18 Issue: no. 1 Pages: 49-63
dc.source Patient
dc.title Preferences for the Societal Impacts of a Pandemic when it Transitions into an Endemic: A Discrete Choice Experiment en
dc.type Artículo
dc.identifier.doi 10.1007/s40271-024-00701-x
dc.publisher.department Facultad de Economía, Negocios y Gobierno


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