PURPOSE:
To
quantify and compare the preferences of researchers and laypeople in
Canada regarding the outcomes of basic biomedical research.
METHOD:
In
autumn 2010, the authors conducted a cross-sectional, national survey
of basic biomedical researchers funded by Canada's national health
research agency and a representative sample of Canadian citizens to
assess preferences for research outcomes across five attributes using a
discrete choice experiment. Attributes included advancing scientific
knowledge (assessed by published papers); building research capacity
(assessed by trainees); informing decisions in the health products
industry (assessed by patents); targeting economic, health, or
scientific priorities; and cost. The authors reduced a fractional
factorial design (18 pairwise choices plus an opt-out option) to three
blocks of six. They also computed part worth utilities, differences in
predicted probabilities, and willingness-to-pay values using nested
logit models.
RESULTS:
Of 3,260 potential researchers,
1,749 (53.65% response rate) completed the questionnaire, along with
1,002 citizens.(response rate of citizens?) Researchers and citizens prioritized high-quality
scientific outcomes (papers, trainees) over other attributes. Both
groups disvalued research targeted at economic priorities relative to
health priorities. Researchers granted a premium to proposals targeting
scientific priorities.
CONCLUSIONS:
Citizens and
researchers fundamentally prioritized the same outcomes for basic
biomedical research. Notably, they prioritized traditional scientific
outcomes and disvalued the pursuit of economic returns. These findings
have implications for how academic medicine assigns incentives and value
to basic health research and how biomedical researchers and the public
may jointly contribute to setting the future research agenda.
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