Health Economics
1992 - 2025
Current editor(s): Alan Maynard, John Hutton and Andrew Jones From John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Bibliographic data for series maintained by Wiley Content Delivery (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 31, issue S2, 2022
- Mental health economics—Social determinants and care‐use pp. 3-5

- Ezra Golberstein and Christoph Kronenberg
- The effect of broadband Internet on the gender gap in mental health: Evidence from Germany pp. 6-21

- Marta Golin
- Mental health effects of education pp. 22-39

- Fjolla Kondirolli and Naveen Sunder
- Saving light, losing lives: How daylight saving time impacts deaths from suicide and substance abuse pp. 40-68

- Eric Jonathon Osborne‐Christenson
- Office‐based mental healthcare and juvenile arrests pp. 69-91

- Monica Deza, Thanh Lu and Johanna Catherine Maclean
- Co‐payment and adolescents' use of psychologist treatment: Spill over effects on mental health care and on suicide attempts pp. 92-114

- Marie Kruse, Kim Rose Olsen and Christian Skovsgaard
- The effects of supported housing for individuals with mental disorders pp. 115-133

- Francisca Vargas Lopes, Pieter Bakx, Sam Harper, Bastian Ravesteijn and Tom Van Ourti
Volume 31, issue S1, 2022
- Pushing the boundaries of evaluation, diffusion, and use of medical devices in Europe: Insights from the COMED project pp. 1-9

- Aleksandra Torbica, Rosanna Tarricone, Jonas Schreyögg and Mike Drummond
- Real‐world evidence in health technology assessment of high‐risk medical devices: Fit for purpose? pp. 10-24

- Philip Klein, Hedwig Blommestein, Maiwenn Al, Benedetta Pongiglione, Aleksandra Torbica and Saskia de Groot
- How real can we get in generating real world evidence? Exploring the opportunities of routinely collected administrative data for evaluation of medical devices pp. 25-43

- Benedetta Pongiglione and Aleksandra Torbica
- Development of a framework and decision tool for the evaluation of health technologies based on surrogate endpoint evidence pp. 44-72

- Oriana Ciani, Bogdan Grigore and Rod S. Taylor
- Recommendations for developing a lifecycle, multidimensional assessment framework for mobile medical apps pp. 73-97

- Rosanna Tarricone, Francesco Petracca, Maria Cucciniello and Oriana Ciani
- Exploring the misalignment on the value of further research between payers and manufacturers. A case study on a novel total artificial heart pp. 98-115

- Carlo Federici and Leandro Pecchia
- An approach to quantify parameter uncertainty in early assessment of novel health technologies pp. 116-134

- Rowan Iskandar, Carlo Federici, Cassandra Berns and Carl Blankart
- Variation in the utilization of medical devices across Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands: A multilevel approach pp. 135-156

- Stefan Rabbe, Meilin Möllenkamp, Benedetta Pongiglione, Hedwig Blommestein, Pim Wetzelaer, Renaud Heine and Jonas Schreyögg
- Spillover effects and other determinants of medical device uptake in the presence of a medical guideline: An analysis of drug‐eluting stents in Germany and Italy pp. 157-178

- Meilin Möllenkamp, Benedetta Pongiglione, Stefan Rabbe, Aleksandra Torbica and Jonas Schreyögg
- Coverage with evidence development for medical devices in Europe: Can practice meet theory? pp. 179-194

- Michael Drummond, Carlo Federici, Vivian Reckers‐Droog, Aleksandra Torbica, Carl Blankart, Oriana Ciani, Zoltán Kaló, Sándor Kovács and Werner Brouwer
- Implementation of coverage with evidence development schemes for medical devices: A decision tool for late technology adopter countries pp. 195-206

- Sandor Kovács, Zoltán Kaló, Rita Daubner‐Bendes, Katarzyna Kolasa, Rok Hren, Tomas Tesar, Vivian Reckers‐Droog, Werner Brouwer, Carlo Federici, Mike Drummond and Antal Tamás Zemplényi
Volume 31, issue 12, 2022
- Reference‐dependent age weighting of quality‐adjusted life years pp. 2515-2536

- Arthur Attema, Werner Brouwer and Jose Luis Pinto‐Prades
- Adoption of hospital diagnosis‐related group financing in Switzerland and the availability of computed tomography scanners pp. 2537-2557

- Laurence C. Baker and Karine Lamiraud
- Well‐being right before and after a permanent nursing home admission pp. 2558-2574

- Judith Bom, Pieter Bakx and Sara Rellstab
- The Affordable Care Act and regulation: Coverage effects of guaranteed issue and ratings reform pp. 2575-2592

- Reagan A. Baughman
- Comparing healthcare quality: A common framework for both ordinal and cardinal data with an application to primary care variation in England pp. 2593-2608

- Paul Allanson and Richard Cookson
- Cloudy with a chance of munchies: Assessing the impact of recreational marijuana legalization on obesity pp. 2609-2629

- Raymond J. March, Veeshan Rayamajhee and Glenn L. Furton
- Two for the price of one: If moving beyond traditional single‐best discrete choice experiments, should we use best‐worst, best‐best or ranking for preference elicitation? pp. 2630-2647

- Samare P. I. Huls, Emily Lancsar, Bas Donkers and Jemimah Ride
- Does providing free internet access to low‐income households affect COVID‐19 spread? pp. 2648-2663

- Daniel Goetz
- Spreading the disease: Protest in times of pandemics pp. 2664-2679

- Martin Lange and Ole Monscheuer
- A scoping review of statistical methods for trial‐based economic evaluations: The current state of play pp. 2680-2699

- Mohamed El Alili, Johanna M. van Dongen, Jonas L. Esser, Martijn W. Heymans, Maurits W. van Tulder and Judith E. Bosmans
- Labor supply and informal care responses to health shocks within couples: Evidence from the UK pp. 2700-2720

- Annarita Macchioni Giaquinto, Andrew Jones, Nigel Rice and Francesca Zantomio
Volume 31, issue 11, 2022
- Should developing countries ban dual practice by physicians? Analysis under mixed hospital competition pp. 2289-2310

- Indranil Dutta, Mario Pezzino and Yan Song
- The impact of a national formulary expansion on diabetics pp. 2311-2332

- Cici McNamara and Natalia Serna
- The effect of hospital‐physician integration on hospital costs pp. 2333-2368

- Stephen McCarthy and Damien Sheehan‐Connor
- Liquidity constraints, cash transfers and the demand for health care in the Covid‐19 pandemic pp. 2369-2380

- Carlos Alberto Belchior and Yara Gomes
- The effect of soda taxes beyond beverages in Philadelphia pp. 2381-2410

- Felipe Lozano‐Rojas and Patrick Carlin
- Incentives to implement personalized medicine under second‐best pricing pp. 2411-2424

- Michel Mougeot and Florence Naegelen
- The intergenerational persistence of opioid dependence: Evidence from administrative data pp. 2425-2444

- Alexander Ahammer and Martin Halla
- Temperature and non‐communicable diseases: Evidence from Indonesia's primary health care system pp. 2445-2464

- Manuela Fritz
- Decomposing inequality of opportunity in child health in Tanzania: The role of access to water and sanitation pp. 2465-2480

- Mkupete Jaah Mkupete, Dieter von Fintel and Ronelle Burger
- Economic shocks, health, and social protection: The effect of COVID‐19 income shocks on health and mitigation through cash transfers in South Africa pp. 2481-2498

- Julius Ohrnberger
- The unintended consequences of hospital strikes on patient outcomes evidence from multiple strikes in the Portuguese National Health Service pp. 2499-2511

- Eduardo Costa
Volume 31, issue 10, 2022
- Patient‐centered appraisal of race‐free clinical risk assessment pp. 2109-2114

- Charles Manski
- Healing the past, reimagining the present, investing in the future: What should be the role of race as a proxy covariate in health economics informed health care policy? pp. 2115-2119

- Andrew H. Briggs
- The effect of community engagement on healthcare utilization and health insurance enrollment in Ghana: Results from a randomized experiment pp. 2120-2141

- Stephen Kwasi Opoku Duku, Edward Nketiah‐Amponsah, Christine J. Fenenga, Wendy Janssens and Menno Pradhan
- The effects of multi‐disciplinary integrated care on healthcare utilization: Evidence from a natural experiment in the UK pp. 2142-2169

- Léontine Goldzahl, Jonathan Stokes and Matt Sutton
- Parental decisions to divorce and have additional children among families with children with cerebral palsy: Evidence from Swedish longitudinal and administrative data pp. 2170-2186

- Vibeke Müller, Ulf-G. Gerdtham, Ann Alriksson‐Schmidt and Johan Jarl
- Toward mandatory health insurance in low‐income countries? An analysis of claims data in Tanzania pp. 2187-2207

- Kathrin Durizzo, Kenneth Harttgen, Fabrizio Tediosi, Maitreyi Sahu, August Kuwawenaruwa, Paola Salari and Isabel Günther
- The impact of COVID‐related economic shocks on household mental health in Pakistan pp. 2208-2228

- Victoria Baranov, Pauline Grosjean, Fatima Jamal Khan and Sarah Walker
- Does raising retirement age lead to a healthier transition to retirement? Evidence from the U.S. Social Security Amendments of 1983 pp. 2229-2243

- Zhaoxue Ci
- Does expanding access to cannabis affect traffic crashes? County‐level evidence from recreational marijuana dispensary sales in Colorado pp. 2244-2268

- Christian Gunadi
- Does weight impact adolescent mental health? Evidence from China pp. 2269-2286

- Si Wang and Qingqing Yang
Volume 31, issue 9, 2022
- The demand for health turns 50: Reflections pp. 1807-1822

- Michael Grossman
- When and how do business shutdowns work? Evidence from Italy's first COVID‐19 wave pp. 1823-1843

- Gabriele Ciminelli and Sílvia Garcia‐Mandicó
- Job loss and psychological distress during the COVID‐19 pandemic: Longitudinal Analysis from residents in nine predominantly African American low‐income neighborhoods pp. 1844-1861

- Matthew D. Baird, Jonathan Cantor, Wendy M. Troxel and Tamara Dubowitz
- Regional variation in prescription drug spending: Evidence from regional migrants in Sweden pp. 1862-1877

- Naimi Johansson and Mikael Svensson
- Medical cannabis and automobile accidents: Evidence from auto insurance pp. 1878-1897

- Cameron Ellis, Martin Grace, Rhet Smith and Juan Zhang
- Consumer choice and public‐private providers: The role of perceived prices pp. 1898-1925

- Kai Shen Lim, Wei Aun Yap and Winnie Yip
- ADHD misdiagnosis: Causes and mitigators pp. 1926-1953

- Jill Furzer, Elizabeth Dhuey and Audrey Laporte
- The lasting consequences of childhood sexual abuse on human capital and economic well‐being pp. 1954-1972

- Laura E. Henkhaus
- Locking out prevention: Dental care in the midst of a pandemic pp. 1973-1992

- Shooshan Danagoulian and Thomas A. Wilk
- Extreme temperatures during pregnancy and adverse birth outcomes: Evidence from 2009 to 2018 U.S. national birth data pp. 1993-2024

- Gulcan Cil and Jiyoon Kim
- Political polarization and cooperation during a pandemic pp. 2025-2049

- Kirsten Cornelson and Boriana Miloucheva
- A theory of fiscal policy response to an epidemic pp. 2050-2071

- Yu Pang
- Flood disasters and health among the urban poor pp. 2072-2089

- Michelle S. Escobar Carías, David Johnston, Rachel Knott and Rohan Sweeney
Volume 31, issue 8, 2022
- An examination of machine learning to map non‐preference based patient reported outcome measures to health state utility values pp. 1525-1557

- Mona Aghdaee, Bonny Parkinson, Kompal Sinha, Yuanyuan Gu, Rajan Sharma, Emma Olin and Henry Cutler
- The effect of preschool attendance on Children's health: Evidence from a lower middle‐income country pp. 1558-1589

- Cuong Nguyen
- Are firms with ‘deep pockets’ more responsive to tort liability? Evidence from nursing homes pp. 1590-1617

- James A. Brickley, Susan F. Lu and Gerard J. Wedig
- Paying for the view? How nursing home prices affect certified staffing ratios pp. 1618-1632

- Dörte Heger, Annika Herr and Anne Mensen
- Correcting for discounting and loss aversion in composite time trade‐off pp. 1633-1648

- Stefan A. Lipman, Arthur Attema and Matthijs M. Versteegh
- How access to addictive drugs affects the supply of substance abuse treatment: Evidence from Medicare Part D pp. 1649-1675

- Matthew T. Knowles
- Can a global budget improve health care efficiency? Experimental evidence from China pp. 1676-1694

- Hao Zhang, Luying Zhang, Roman Xu, Jay Pan, Min Hu, Weiyan Jian and Winnie Yip
- Motivation and competition in health care pp. 1695-1712

- Anthony Scott and Peter Sivey
- Heuristic thinking in the workplace: Evidence from primary care pp. 1713-1729

- Ity Shurtz
- Stepping into adulthood during a recession: Did job losses during the Great Recession impact health of young adults? pp. 1730-1751

- Shamma Adeeb Alam and Bijetri Bose
- An extra hour wasted? Bar closing hours and traffic accidents in Norway pp. 1752-1769

- Colin Green and Lana Krehic
- Health status and the Great Recession. Evidence from electronic health records pp. 1770-1799

- Federico Belotti, Joanna Kopinska, Alessandro Palma and Andrea Piano Mortari
- The effect of increasing Women's autonomy on primary and repeated caesarean sections in Brazil pp. 1800-1804

- Victor Hugo de Oliveira, Ines Lee and Climent Quintana‐Domeque
Volume 31, issue 7, 2022
- Modeling to inform economy‐wide pandemic policy: Bringing epidemiologists and economists together pp. 1291-1295

- Michael E. Darden, David Dowdy, Lauren Gardner, Barton H. Hamilton, Karen Kopecky, Melissa Marx, Nicholas Papageorge, Daniel Polsky, Kimberly A. Powers, Elizabeth A. Stuart and Matthew V. Zahn
- Provider supply and access to primary care pp. 1296-1316

- Christine A. Yee, Kyle Barr, Taeko Minegishi, Austin Frakt and Steven Pizer
- Rainfall shocks, child mortality, and water infrastructure pp. 1317-1338

- Sundar Ponnusamy
- Effectiveness of hospital transfer payments under a prospective payment system: An analysis of a policy change in New Zealand pp. 1339-1346

- Christoph Schumacher
- All eyes on the price: An assessment of the willingness‐to‐pay for eyeglasses in rural Burkina Faso pp. 1347-1367

- Michael Grimm and Renate Hartwig
- Comparing risk adjustment estimation methods under data availability constraints pp. 1368-1380

- Marica Iommi, Savannah Bergquist, Gianluca Fiorentini and Francesco Paolucci
- Petrol prices and obesity pp. 1381-1401

- Kushneel Prakash, Sefa Awaworyi Churchill and Russell Smyth
- Coping with the consequences of short‐term illness shocks: The role of intra‐household labor substitution pp. 1402-1422

- Abhishek Dureja and Digvijay Negi
- Hospital‐physician integration and risk‐coding intensity pp. 1423-1437

- Brady Post, Edward Norton, Brent K. Hollenbeck and Andrew M. Ryan
- A regression framework for a probabilistic measure of cost‐effectiveness pp. 1438-1451

- Nicholas Illenberger, Nandita Mitra and Andrew J. Spieker
- Prenatal substance use policies and newborn health pp. 1452-1467

- Angélica Meinhofer, Allison Witman, Johanna Catherine Maclean and Yuhua Bao
- The effects of Uber diffusion on the mental health of drivers pp. 1468-1490

- Bénédicte Apouey and Mark Stabile
- On the demand for telemedicine: Evidence from the COVID‐19 pandemic pp. 1491-1505

- Matias Busso, Maria P. Gonzalez and Carlos Scartascini
- A short note revisiting the concentration index: Does the normalization of the concentration index matter? pp. 1506-1512

- John E. Ataguba
- Recreational cannabis legalizations associated with reductions in prescription drug utilization among Medicaid enrollees pp. 1513-1521

- Shyam Raman and Ashley C. Bradford
Volume 31, issue 6, 2022
- Mapping between EQ‐5D‐3L and EQ‐5D‐5L: A survey experiment on the validity of multi‐instrument data pp. 923-939

- Mónica Hernández‐Alava and Stephen Pudney
- Waiting to get a pension: The impact of pension eligibility on psychological distress pp. 940-955

- Kadir Atalay and Anita Staneva
- The long‐run effects of diagnosis related group payment on hospital lengths of stay in a publicly funded health care system: Evidence from 15 years of micro data pp. 956-972

- María José Aragón, Martin Chalkley and Noémi Kreif
- Health insurance coverage and health outcomes among transgender adults in the United States pp. 973-992

- Travis Campbell and Yana Rodgers
- The macro‐level effect of religiosity on health pp. 993-1011

- Dierk Herzer
- The effect of involuntary retirement on healthcare use pp. 1012-1032

- Anikó Bíró, Réka Branyiczki and Péter Elek
- The effect of beverage taxes on youth consumption and body mass index: Evidence from Mauritius pp. 1033-1045

- John Cawley, Michael Daly and Rebecca Thornton
- A nonlinear dynamic factor model of health and medical treatment pp. 1046-1066

- Franco Peracchi and Claudio Rossetti
- The long‐term effect of the Earned Income Tax Credit on women's physical and mental health pp. 1067-1102

- Lauren E. Jones, Guangyi Wang and Tansel Yilmazer
- The effect on dental care utilization from transitioning pediatric Medicaid beneficiaries to managed care pp. 1103-1128

- Kamyar Nasseh and John R. Bowblis
- Healthy, nudged, and wise: Experimental evidence on the role of information salience in reducing tobacco intake pp. 1129-1166

- Adnan M. S. Fakir and Tushar Bharati
- The impact of increasing the United Kingdom national minimum wage on self‐reported health pp. 1167-1183

- Jacob Maxwell, Robert Pryce and Luke B. Wilson
- Age, morbidity, or something else? A residual approach using microdata to measure the impact of technological progress on health care expenditure pp. 1184-1201

- Mauro Laudicella, Paolo Li Donni, Kim Rose Olsen and Dorte Gyrd‐Hansen
- Exploring physician agency under demand‐side cost sharing—An experimental approach pp. 1202-1227

- Ge Ge, Geir Godager and Jian Wang
- The effect of absolute versus relative temperature on health and the role of social care pp. 1228-1248

- Giuliano Masiero, Fabrizio Mazzonna and Michael Santarossa
- When full insurance may not be optimal: The case of restricted substitution pp. 1249-1257

- Johannes G. Jaspersen
- Throwing caution to the wind: How hurricanes affect COVID‐19 spread pp. 1258-1265

- Marlon Tracey, Alicia Plemmons and Ariel Belasen
- Perceived risk and vaccine hesitancy: Quasi‐experimental evidence from Italy pp. 1266-1275

- Claudio Deiana, Andrea Geraci, Gianluca Mazzarella and Fabio Sabatini
- Linear mixed models to handle missing at random data in trial‐based economic evaluations pp. 1276-1287

- Andrea Gabrio, Catrin Plumpton, Sube Banerjee and Baptiste Leurent
Volume 31, issue 5, 2022
- Health insurance, medical debt, and financial well‐being pp. 689-728

- Michael Batty, Christa Gibbs and Benedic Ippolito
- Prenatal air pollution exposure and neonatal health pp. 729-759

- Alessandro Palma, Inna Petrunyk and Daniela Vuri
- Access to health care and mental health—Evidence from the ACA preexisting conditions provision pp. 760-783

- Matt Hampton and Otto Lenhart
- How to deal with persistently low/high spenders in health plan payment systems? pp. 784-805

- Richard C. van Kleef and René C. J. A. van Vliet
- Discrete choice analysis of health worker job preferences in Ethiopia: Separating attribute non‐attendance from taste heterogeneity pp. 806-819

- Nikita Arora, Matthew Quaife, Kara Hanson, Mylene Lagarde, Dorka Woldesenbet, Abiy Seifu and Romain Crastes dit Sourd
- Competition and efficiency in repeated procurements: Lessons from the Finnish rehabilitation markets pp. 820-835

- Visa Pitkänen
- Eliciting risk preferences that predict risky health behavior: A comparison of two approaches pp. 836-858

- Murong Yang, Laurence Roope, James Buchanan, Arthur Attema, Philip M. Clarke, A. Sarah Walker and Sarah Wordsworth
- Reforming the provision of cross‐border medical care: Evidence from Spain pp. 859-876

- Catalina Amuedo‐Dorantes, Noelia Rivera‐Garrido and Judit Vall Castello
- The health returns of attending university for the marginally eligible student pp. 877-903

- Gawain Heckley, Martin Nordin and Ulf-G. Gerdtham
- HIV, risk, and time preferences: Evidence from a general population sample in Lesotho pp. 904-911

- Martina Björkman Nyqvist, Lucia Corno, Damien de Walque and Jakob Svensson
- The Covid‐19 pandemic and its impact on socioeconomic inequality in psychological distress in the United Kingdom: An update pp. 912-920

- Xiaoying Gao, Apostolos Davillas and Andrew Jones
Volume 31, issue 4, 2022
- Moving out but not for the better: Health consequences of interprovincial rural‐urban migration in China pp. 555-573

- Xinjie Shi
- The effects of a hypertension diagnosis on health behaviors: A two‐dimensional regression discontinuity analysis pp. 574-596

- Tiantian Dai, Shenyi Jiang, Xiangbo Liu and Ang Sun
- The long‐term health effects of initiating smoking in adolescence: Evidence from a national longitudinal survey pp. 597-613

- Aliaksandr Amialchuk and Onur Sapci
- Bandwagoning, free‐riding and heterogeneity in influenza vaccine decisions: An online experiment pp. 614-646

- Matteo Galizzi, Krystal W. Lau, Marisa Miraldo and Katharina Hauck
- Biosimilar competition: Early learning pp. 647-663

- Richard G. Frank, Mahnum Shahzad, Aaron S. Kesselheim and William Feldman
- The effect of aging out of the Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) program on food insecurity pp. 664-685

- Seung Jin Cho
Volume 31, issue 3, 2022
- Technology adoption by primary care physicians pp. 443-465

- Tor Iversen and Ching-to Ma
- Measuring and valuing broader impacts in public health: Development of a sanitation‐related quality of life instrument in Maputo, Mozambique pp. 466-480

- Ian Ross, Giulia Greco, Charles Opondo, Zaida Adriano, Rassul Nala, Joe Brown, Robert Dreibelbis and Oliver Cumming
- Forgetting‐by‐not‐doing: The case of surgeons and cesarean sections pp. 481-495

- Gabriel Facchini
- Fear of COVID‐19 contagion and consumption: Evidence from a survey of Italian households pp. 496-507

- Giovanni Immordino, Tullio Jappelli, Tommaso Oliviero and Alberto Zazzaro
- Getting used to terrorist threats? Evidence from French terrorist attacks between 2015 and 2016 pp. 508-540

- Sylvie Blasco, Eva Moreno‐Galbis and Jeremy Tanguy
- Providing vouchers and value information for already free eye exams increases uptake among a low‐income minority population: A randomized trial pp. 541-551

- Seema Kacker, Mario Macis, Prateek Gajwani and David S. Friedman
Volume 31, issue 2, 2022
- Heterogeneous health effects of medical marijuana legalization: Evidence from young adults in the United States pp. 269-283

- Junxing Chay and Seonghoon Kim
- Impact of COVID‐19 lockdowns on mental health: Evidence from a quasi‐natural experiment in England and Scotland pp. 284-296

- Manuel Serrano‐Alarcón, Alexander Kentikelenis, Martin Mckee and David Stuckler
- Flipping the script: The effects of opioid prescription monitoring on specialty‐specific provider behavior pp. 297-341

- Alice M. Ellyson, Jevay Grooms and Alberto Ortega
- Rationing of a scarce life‐saving resource: Public preferences for prioritizing COVID‐19 vaccination pp. 342-362

- Jeroen Luyten, Sandy Tubeuf and Roselinde Kessels
- Utility maximization versus regret minimization in health choice behavior: Evidence from four datasets pp. 363-381

- John Buckell, Vrinda Vasavada, Sarah Wordsworth, Dean A. Regier and Matthew Quaife
- Multivariate risk preferences in the quality‐adjusted life year model pp. 382-398

- Arthur Attema, Jona J. Frasch and Olivier L’Haridon
- Natural disasters and missing children pp. 399-416

- Sundar Ponnusamy
- Development of a model to demonstrate the impact of National Institute of Health and Care Excellence cost‐effectiveness assessment on health utility for targeted medicines pp. 417-430

- Daniel Gallacher, Nigel Stallard, Peter Kimani, Elvan Gökalp and Juergen Branke
- Not all respondents use a multiplicative utility function in choice experiments for health state valuations, which should be reflected in the elicitation format (or statistical analysis) pp. 431-439

- Marcel F. Jonker and Richard Norman
Volume 31, issue 1, 2022
- Macroeconomic conditions and health‐related outcomes in the United States: A metropolitan and micropolitan statistical area‐level analysis between 2004 and 2017 pp. 3-20

- Lizhong Peng, Jie Chen and Xiaohui Guo
- The effect of nurse practitioner scope of practice laws on primary care delivery pp. 21-41

- Laura Barrie Smith
- Mental health effects of same‐sex marriage legalization pp. 42-56

- Shuai Chen and Jan van Ours
- Supplementary private health insurance: The impact of physician financial incentives on medical practice pp. 57-72

- Carine Milcent and Saad Zbiri
- Mosquito‐borne disease and newborn health pp. 73-93

- Viviane Sanfelice
- The role of wage beliefs in the decision to become a nurse pp. 94-111

- Philipp Kugler
- Violence and newborn health: Estimates for Colombia pp. 112-136

- Laura Rodriguez Takeuchi
- Re‐exploring the early relationship between teenage cigarette and e‐cigarette use using price and tax changes pp. 137-153

- Michael Pesko and Casey Warman
- How effective has the Spanish lockdown been to battle COVID‐19? A spatial analysis of the coronavirus propagation across provinces pp. 154-173

- Luis Orea and Inmaculada Álvarez
- The effects of drug safety warnings on drug sales and share prices pp. 174-196

- Jędrzej Białkowski and Jeremy Clark
- Social acceptability of standard and behavioral economic inspired policies designed to reduce and prevent obesity pp. 197-214

- Emily Lancsar, Jemimah Ride, Nicole Black, Leonie Burgess and Anna Peeters
- Sugar rush or sugar crash? Experimental evidence on the impact of sugary drinks in the classroom pp. 215-232

- Fritz Schiltz and Kristof De Witte
- Health insurance and subjective well‐being: Evidence from two healthcare reforms in the United States pp. 233-249

- Seonghoon Kim and Kanghyock Koh
- Whose mental health declines during economic downturns? pp. 250-257

- Nicole Black, Angela Jackson and David Johnston
- To be or not to be: Future lives in economic evaluation pp. 258-265

- Jeroen Luyten, Evelyn Verbeke and Erik Schokkaert
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