Title: Damage Function Models
1Damage Function Models
Dave Stieb
2And it was so typically brilliant of you to have
invited an epidemiologist
3Quantifying Health Benefits
Cleaner fuel
Improved ambient air quality
Improved public health
/QALY
Value to society
Reduced vehicle emissions
Reduced population exposure
4Representing the weight of evidence How do you
choose a parameter value?
- Expert judgment
- Flexible, streamlined
- Can be seen as arbitrary
- Systematic overview and meta-analysis
- Rigorous, comprehensive
- Rigid, cumbersome
- Structured consensus process (eg. Delphi),
expert elicitation - Middle ground
5Dealing with uncertainty
- WHAT IF the parameter were different?
- Sensitivity analysis
- Run the analysis a few times and see how the
results change - Probabilistic analysis
- Run the analysis thousands of times (iterations)
- For each iteration, pick a different value for
each parameter, from an input distribution - The results are also presented as a distribution
most likely value of benefits is y, but could be
as low as x and as high as z
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7- 1996
- Numerous policy applications
- Acidifying emissions
- AQOs
- Sulphur in gas
- CWS
- Climate change co-benefits
- Peer reviewed
8Sulphur in Gasoline
9- Canadian gasoline sulphur levels ranged from lt10
to 1000 ppm with national average of 340 ppm - In 1999, federal regulation took effect to reduce
average sulphur content of gasoline to 30 ppm by
2005
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11Findings of Health Panel for seven cities only,
in 2001- Reducing sulphur to 30 ppm improves the
health of Canadians
12The doctor will bill you now
13Benefits for Year 2001 by type for 4 alternative
scenarios central, low and high estimates
14Health Benefits vs. Refinery Costs
( 45 of CanadianPopulation )
Benefits and costs based on 30 ppm (total
population)
15To do list
- Alternative methods of mapping monitoring data to
populations (eg. geostatistical methods) - Update baseline air quality data
- Alternative status quo air quality (dont just
assume constant) - Alternative population projections (allow
different assumptions about birth rate, mortality
rate, immigration and internal migration) - Update to 2001 census
- Update risk coefficients
- Derive risk coefficients more systematically
- Allow risk coefficients to differ by geographic
area - Allow baseline morbidity, mortality rates to
differ by geographic area - Allow non-linearity in concentration response
- Permit multi-year analysis
- More flexible approach to uncertainty analysis
(not just discrete three point distributions) - Alternatives to valuation (eg. QALYs)
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19ICAP
- Ontario version released in 2000
- Expanded nationally
- Peer reviewed
- Currently being updated
20- Includes database of concentration response
functions, valuations - Peer reviewed
- Available online
21Key points
- Reduced (increased) air pollution results in
health and environmental benefits (damages) - Alternative approaches to representing weight of
evidence, uncertainty - Improved health (and environmental quality) have
value to society - Variety of tools available to assess benefits
22Extra slides
23- Damages
- Burden on society from negative effects of air
pollution - Benefits
- Gain to society from reducing negative effects of
air pollution
24How do we quantify the impact of reduced
(increased) exposure?
25Monetary Valuation
- AKA
- monetization
- assigning a monetary value to a change in health
status - most appropriately measured as willingness to pay
to improve health or willingness to accept
compensation to worsen it
26Image Problem - I
- Valuation implicit in innumerable private and
public decisions - Either do it implicitly or explicitly, but cant
avoid it - Balances singular focus on industry compliance
costs
27Image Problem - II
- Simply asking people their preferences is too
hypothetical
- Considerable effort in developing valid and
reliable measures - Reality checks
28Image Problem - III
- Lives worth more in rich countries
- Distributional/ equity issues can be taken into
account
29Quality/ Disability Adjusted Life Years
Quality Adjusted Life Years (QALYs)
Quality of Life (0-1 scale)
Time (years)
x
OR
30Shortcomings
- People like QALYs/DALYs because simple, intuitive
- Huge following in clinical/ public health domain
- BUT
- Some economists hate QALYs/ DALYs
- Dont measure what they purport to measure
(peoples preferences among health states) - Ethical concerns
- Discriminates against elderly, disabled
- Big question left unanswered
- - how much should we spend to gain 1 QALY
- - 40,000 (?) see also Harvard Cost-utility
Analysis Database
311991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
32Sulfate and Quality Adjusted Life Expectancy
- Risk functions by age, sex, education, from
re-analysis of ACS cohort - Applied to population of Canada over lifespan
- Change in life expectancy estimated
- Quality adjustment based on health utilities
index from NPHS
33Results
Study Life Years Lost QALYs Lost
Brunekreef 0.19 (6 cities ACS)
Nevalainen and Pekkanen 0.17 (6 cities) 0.09 (ACS)
Wolfsson (smoking) 0.5 (females) 0.9 (males)
Coyle 0.05 (ACS) 0.01 (females) 0.07 (males)
34- Risk coefficients from American Cancer Society
cohort study applied to Canadian life tables - Quality of life ratings from National Population
Health Survey (Health Utilities Index) - Substantial impact of sulfate on quality adjusted
life expectancy - Investment of over 1 billion/yr. would be
warranted if it reduced sulfate concentrations
by 1 µ g/m3.
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