4th HOPE Workshop: Discrete Choice Experiment in Health Research

Measuring what people prefer?

There is growing interest in how to better measure and integrate end-user preferences into the design and delivery of health-related interventions and programs.

Health preference research is an exciting field using quantitative statistical methods to study choices made by individuals or groups to understand how choices are made and to forecast future choices.

 

Workshop Highlight

  1. All you need to know about DCE: Learn to build a DCE step by step from designing to interpreting the outputs
  1. Conduct your own DCE: Hands on workshop to build your own DCE
  1. Seamless Networking: Connect with peers in our workshop

 

Instructors

  • Associate Professor Jason Ong is a sexual physician and health economist with expertise in conducting DCEs. He has conducted DCEs in 24 countries to date. This includes evaluating the preferences for HIV testing among men who have sex with men (MSM) in China, HIV testing in youths living in Nigeria, and HIV self-testing among MSM in Australia.
  • Warittha Tieosapjaroen is a PhD candidate at Monash University. She has conducted DCEs related to weight gain in people living with HIV and preferences for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) in 16 countries in the Asia-Pacific region.

Recording

Slide / Workbook