Valuing pain using the subjective well-being method

Year of Publication
2017
Author
Series Title
NBER Working Paper Series
Document Number
Working Paper No. 23649
Institution
National Bureau of Economic Research
City
Cambridge, MA
Abstract

Chronic pain clearly lowers utility, but it is empirically challenging to estimate the monetary compensation needed to offset this utility reduction. We use the subjective well-being method to estimate the value of pain relief among individuals age 50 and older. We use a sample of 64,205 observations from 4 waves (2008-2014) of the Health and Retirement Study, a nationally representative individual-level survey data, permitting us to control for individual heterogeneity. Our models, which allow for nonlinear effects in income, show the value of avoiding pain ranging between 56 to 145 USD per day. These results are lower than previously reported, suggesting that the value of pain relief varies by income levels. Thus, previous estimates of the value of pain relief assuming constant monetary compensation for pain across income levels are heavily affected by the highest income level. Furthermore, we find that the value of pain relief increases with pain severity.

Date Published
08/2017
URL
http://www.nber.org/papers/w23649.pdf
DOI
10.3386/w23649
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