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Interface Between Risk Assessment and Economics: Economic Valuation Methods. Presentation to IRAC Conference Risk Assessment, Economic Analysis, and Foodborne Illness Regulations Al McGartland, USEPA November 16, 2007. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Interface Between Risk Assessment and Economics: Economic Valuation Methods
Presentation to IRAC Conference
Risk Assessment, Economic Analysis, and Foodborne Illness Regulations
Al McGartland, USEPA
November 16, 2007
The opinions in this presentation do not necessarily represent those of EPA.
2
1990s
Evolution of Risk Assessment at EPA
1970s
beginnings of the field of risk assessment emphasis on oral route per FDA precedent
1980s
adopt RA/RM paradigm guidelines & basic methodologies data bases (IRIS)
new tools/data bases refinement of existing tools understanding mechanisms
of action/interactions ecological assessment
2000s
complex mixtures sensitive subpopulations non-linear dose-response input into economic analysis
3
Roles of Risk Assessment
Risk Assessment - cancer - non-cancer
Policy Decision - standards - information
Risk Assessment Risk Management
Protective
4
Roles of Risk Assessment
Risk Assessment - cancer - non-cancer
Policy Decision - standards - information
Risk Assessment
Economic Analysis- benefit-cost analysis- cost effectiveness- economic impacts
Risk Management
Protective
Predictive
5
Damage Function Approach
• Benefits analysis draws upon results of other disciplines
• Simplified linear process of benefits analysis, but there may be feedback loops – For example, changes in individual behaviors
evaluated in the benefits “box” may have implications for emissions or exposure
Emissions Environmental
Concentrations
Exposure
Effects(dose-response)
Benefits($ for each effect)
6
From Risk Assessment to Economics
• Should focus on well-defined health endpoints that have an effect on individual sense of well-being.– “hormone level” vs. hypothyroidism
• Should be probabilities to represent the expected changes in risk to an individual– probabilities not thresholds
– upper bound risk estimates
• Should provide information on when risks change due to exposure changes – substantial lags between exposure and cancer
7
Health Science Inputs and Economic Valuation
• Epidemiological data are preferred for valuation in policy analysis– observed health effects in humans– incorporates behavioral responses
• Results from animal studies may be used– Cancer dose-response: risk estimates are still usable although their
applicability can be a concerns (e.g, upper-bound estimates)– Non-cancer risk assessment: Reference doses and other measures
that don’t estimate probabilities cannot be utilized in benefits analysis
8
Cancer vs. Non-Cancer Benefits
9
Economic Analysis
PredictiveRisk Assessment
Data
Cost of Illness
Willingness to Pay
QualityAdjustedLife Years
DisabilityAdjustedLife Years
Cost-Effectiveness
Analysis
Benefit-CostAnalysis
Analytic Approach
Health Value Measure
10
Economic Analysis
PredictiveRisk Assessment
Data
Cost of Illness
Willingness to Pay
QualityAdjustedLife Years
DisabilityAdjustedLife Years
Cost-Effectiveness
Analysis
Benefit-CostAnalysis
Analytic Approach
Health Value Measure
11
Benefit-Cost Analysis
• Simulates the private market test for public goods– BCA quantifies all benefits and costs of producing environmental
protection– Consistent with private markets, the efficient outcome is the option
that maximizes net benefits– BCA is, therefore, an efficiency test for the production of environmental
protection
.
12
Benefits
• Rules for determining the benefit, or value, of environmental protection are the same as those in the private market – quantify the willingness to pay for the environmental commodity
• Value is determined by what consumers are willing to pay for a commodity, not what the analyst believes the value to be– Economists look to see what values society places on environmental goods
– Analysts do not assign their own values
• Because environmental protection it is a public good, the benefits of a policy are the sum total of each affected individual’s willingness to pay for the policy
13
Values for use in Benefit-Cost Analysis
Cost of illness ($)
• Each avoided health effect converted to $-equivalent based on lost production and health care costs– lost production may include household production
• Clearly defined and measurable
• Limited measure– not necessarily based on individual preferences– incomplete, does not include pain and suffering– price of health care may not equal costs– generally, loosely, characterized as a lower bound on willingness to pay
14
Willingness to Pay
Willingness to Pay for risk reduction ($)• Each avoided health effect converted to $ based on preferences of the
individuals affected
Well-being is expressed in a general utility function: Utility=(health, all other goods)
Willingness to pay is...• One’s own WTP for one’s own risk reduction
– WTP for others may be included under strict conditions
• Affected and constrained by income– willingness to pay includes “ability to pay”
Willingness to pay is not…• A measure of on ex post compensation experiencing health effect
– WTP is measured ex ante for risk reductions
15
Health Benefits & Methods
• Methods are based on where people appear to tradeoff risk and wealth:
– Hedonics:• Wage-risk: how much additional wages to workers require to take risky jobs?• Housing prices: extra housing price for “safer” area or higher env. quality?
– Averting Behaviors: how much do individuals pay for safety devices and safer vehicles, etc.?
– Stated Preference (Surveys): how much do individuals state they will pay for a specified risk reduction
16
Value of a Statistical Life (VSL)
• The value of mortality risk reductions is often summarized by calculating the value of a statistical life or VSL
• What is a “statistical life”?– Suppose a public policy were to reduce mortality risk by 1 in 10,000
• If 10,000 were affected by this policy then, statistically, 1 death would be avoided
– We have no idea before we implement the policy which life will be “saved.”
• What is the Value of a Statistical Life (VSL)?– Derived from the value or WTP individuals place on a small change
in risk
17
VSL Key Points
• VSL estimates do NOT capture the value of an identifiable person
• VSL estimates do NOT capture how much an individual would be willing to pay to save his own life with certainty or the life of a loved one
• Instead, VSL estimates represent (or are derived from) individual willingness to pay for a SMALL change in the probability of dying
18
Example VSL Calculations
• Suppose that each of 10,000 people were willing to pay $500 each for the 1 in 10,000 risk reduction– The value of that statistical life is the sum of the total of the individual
amounts the 10,000 people would pay for the risk reduction
• Put more generally, the value of a statistical life is calculated:– VSL = WTP* (1/risk reduction)
• In our case this would amount to…– VSL $500*(1/(1/10,000)) = $5,000,000
19
Issue: VSL and Life Expectancy
20
Morbidity (illness): ”value of statistical illness” based on WTP to reduce risks or avoid illness
We lack WTP estimates for many non-fatal illnesses• each illness is unique to some extent (severity, frequency, duration)
– requires unique research or systematic extrapolation from others
• EPA policy and practice– No set values for particular illness– Often use WTP values for similar illnesses
• Non-fatal bladder cancer use range based on WTP per statistical chronic bronchitis ($600,000) to non-fatal lymphoma ($3 million)
• Cost-of-illness methods can be difficult– Reporting is censored. Likely that many minor illnesses are never seen by
physician.
Valuing changes in morbidity risk
21
Additional Considerations (WTP)
• Equity Considerations– WTP is related to income– What if studies demonstrate the elderly have lower VSL? – recent results suggest health status has little effect on valuing mortality
risks
• Economic criticisms– sensitive to risk perceptions– does not include people’s WTP for risk reductions to other people
• Dollar terms can be compared directly to costs
• Very flexible theoretically...– incorporates broad range of health effects– can incorporate context (source of risk)
22
Issue: Timing of Exposure changes and risk reductions
The timing of risk reductions matters for the value of benefits
Generally, risk reduction like any economic good is preferred sooner rather than later (time discounting)
Also, the shorter the cessation lag:• The more cases are avoided (or lives saved) over the life of the rule or the analysis• The fewer deaths from other causes before the benefit is realized
These data are not often part of the risk assessment
23
Impact of Cessation Lags on Benefits
ABC
D
Alternative Cessation Lag “cases”
avoided
Benefits ($m)
3%
Benefits ($m)
7%
Immediate Benefits (A+B+C+D) 120 $ 429 $ 257
Exponential Decay (A+B+C) 100 $ 330 $ 176
Lagged Step Function (A+B) 60 $ 162 $ 64
30-year fixed lag (A) 30 $ 65 $ 18
24
Cost Effectiveness Analysis
• Benefits are not measured in non-monetary units
• Ranks alternatives by $ per unit, – may determine the best alternative, but cannot determine if any of the
alternatives should be done.
• For mortality risks typical “units”– Lives saved => rank by $ per life saved– Life years => rank by $ per life-year saved
• Neither of these measures accomodates non-fatal illnesses
• Cost-effectiveness cannot accommodate mortality and morbidity unless they are combined into some common measure– Quality Adjusted Life Years (QALYs) combine fatal and non-fatal
illnesses into one measure
25
QALYs for Cost-Effectiveness
Quality-Adjusted Life Years (QALYs)
• health conceptualized as having two dimensions– longevity (years)– health-related quality of life– outcome is total years weighted by quality in each year
• well-being is defined by health profile over time– Utility = U(Quality, longevity)
• wealth does not enter into this framework
26
Quality-Adjusted Life Years (QALYs)
• Assume a policy extends the baseline health profile (white)
• The gain in QALYs is shown in gray– Quality * years at that quality
• Note the risk assessment requirements: a profile of expected future health outcomes and time in each health state
27
Additional Considerations (QALYs)
• Equity considerations– interventions for young preferred to interventions for old
• Young have more life years remaining– life extensions for healthy preferred to life extensions to less-healthy
• Healthy have a higher quality than chronically ill
• Economic criticisms– assumptions are restrictive and may not reflect actual preferences– concern about quality of surveys (data)– How to deal with non-health effects (e.g., environmental) from the
policy in a cost-effectiveness framework
28
WTP QALY
Type of AnalysisBenefit-Cost
AnalysisCost-Effectiveness Analysis
Tradeoff basismoney and
risks to healthhealth and longevity
Endowment
/ Comparisonindividual wealth health profile
Social Goal Max. self-assessed welfare
Sum (individual WTP ($) values)
Max. health - weighted longevity
Sum (quality * years)
WTP & QALY: Some Conceptual Comparisons
29
Concluding Thoughts
• Economics offers tools for risk management– Risk assessment must be predictive to support economic analysis
• This kind of risk assessment is being actively pursued
– There are two widespread economic approaches to valuing changes to health and risk: benefit-cost analysis and cost-effectiveness analysis
– Benefit-cost analysis and cost-effectiveness analysis approaches use very different metrics to assess the value of risk changes
• BCA and CEA will not necessarily point to the same policy or standard.