4.5 Article

A cost-benefit analysis of hearing aids, including the benefits of reducing the symptoms of dementia

Journal

APPLIED ECONOMICS
Volume 51, Issue 28, Pages 3091-3103

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/00036846.2018.1564123

Keywords

Hearing Aids; dementia; cost-benefit analysis

Categories

Funding

  1. NIA/NIH [U01 AG016976]
  2. NIA [P30 AG019610, P30 AG013846, P50 AG008702, P50 AG025688, P30 AG010133, P50 AG005146, P50 AG005134, P50 AG016574, P50 AG005138, P30 AG008051, P30 AG013854, P30 AG008017, P30 AG010161, P30 AG010129, P50 AG016573]
  3. 1 NIA [P50 AG016570, P50 AG005131, P50 AG023501, P30 AG035982, P30 AG028383, P30 AG010124, P50 AG005133, P50 AG005142, P30 AG012300, P50 AG005136, P50 AG033514, P50 AG005681]

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We carried out a CBA of hearing aids (HAs) in which we estimated the direct utility benefits, and included the indirect utility benefits working through a reduction in dementia symptoms. The benefits methodology involved using QALYs as the outcome measure and then applying the price of a QALY to convert the outcome measure into monetary terms. The price of a QALY was derived from an age-specific VSL estimate. The effects of HAs on utility were estimated from a fixed effects regression on a large national panel data set provided by NACC where we used a negative proxy for the QoL. We also used a fixed effects regression for the estimate of the indirect benefits involving HAs reducing dementia symptoms. We found that the total benefits, mainly coming from the direct benefits, were extremely large relative to the costs, with benefit-cost ratios over 30.

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