NHTSA CASE STUDY Analytical Approach

1 / 10
About This Presentation
Title:

NHTSA CASE STUDY Analytical Approach

Description:

Benefit/Cost Analysis added ($3.5 million value of statistical life) ... OMB has declined to establish a specific value of life for all regulating agencies to use. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:53
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 11
Provided by: LBer6

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: NHTSA CASE STUDY Analytical Approach


1
NHTSA CASE STUDYAnalytical Approach
  • Presentation for IOM
  • APRIL 5, 2005

2
General Approach to Injury
  •  
  • NHTSA countermeasures impact both mortality and
    morbidity. Therefore, any valuation approach we
    adopt must address both impacts (Nonfatal
    Injuries typically account for 56 of monetary
    harm from motor vehicle crashes).
  • Injuries stratified by severity using Abbreviated
    Injury Scale. 
  • For most NHTSA rulemakings, stratification by
    injury severity provides a sufficient basis for
    analysis.

3
Analytical Approach
  • Cost-effectiveness Analysis cost per equivalent
    fatality
  • Requires way to express fatalities and non-fatal
    injuries in common terms (fatality equivalents)
    How many injuries correspond to a fatality?
  • Value both mortality and morbidity to reflect
    societal impact.
  • Individuals lost quality of life
  • Economic impacts

4
Basis for Quality of Life Estimates
  • Functional Capacity Loss measures established by
    Hirsh and by Carston and Oday physician panel
    estimates of various dimensions of functionality
  • Mobility
  • Cognitive
  • Pain
  • Cosmetic
  • Activities (bending, lifting)
  • Sensory (vision, hearing)
  •  
  • Miller translated levels of functional capacity
    loss into utility loss based on studies by
    Torrance (1982), Carsten (1986), and Kaplan
    (1982). Added dimension for ability to work.
    Derived weights both within and across each
    dimension.
  •  
  • Estimate of quality of life lost to injury
    relative to whole life

5
Economic Valuation
  •  Weighted functional capacity losses for each
    injury category can be valued relative to
    selected value of statistical life.
  • Economic impacts not included in value of life
    measurements are added to reflect overall
    societal loss at each injury level.
  • Together these factors represent Comprehensive
    Values which are used to derive relative value
    factors for nonfatal injuries.

6
Changes in Response to A-4
  • Benefit/Cost Analysis added (3.5 million value
    of statistical life)
  • Sensitivity analysis for value of fatality used
    in Benefit /Cost analysis (5.5 million)
  • Both 3 and 7 discount rates examined
  • Uncertainty analysis added for billion dollar
    rules (2 so far)
  • Currently examining uncertainty around relative
    value of nonfatal injuries

7
Key Issues
  • Is one metric superior to all others, or do they
    have specific strengths and weaknesses that make
    more than one desirable in different
    circumstances?
  • How would application of different injury
    valuation method impact results of regulatory
    analyses?
  • Are differences significant enough to modify the
    outcome of a regulatory process?

8
Key Issues, Cont.
  • If differences are significant, what criteria
    should agencies use to determine best practice?
    Are there universal criteria, or would it be
    appropriate to apply different criteria across
    agencies or to different rulemakings?
  • OMB has declined to establish a specific value
    of life for all regulating agencies to use. They
    allow agencies to select their own value so long
    as they can cite a justification for it. Value
    of life estimates can differ dramatically.
    (1-10 million). Allowing agencies the leeway
    to select their own criteria for the relative
    valuation of morbidity would be consistent with
    OMBs current policy towards valuing mortality.

9
Results Across Indices
10
Results Across Indices
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)