Discrete Choice Experiment on Healthy Life Expectancy

Single Wave Study

General Information

Title
Discrete Choice Experiment on Healthy Life Expectancy
Project Number
420
Abstract
A discrete choice experiment to investigate what people choose when they are offered the choice between two government health programs that differ in life expectancy of the population.
Longitudinal Type
Single Wave Study
Begin date
02-06-2025
End date
30-06-2025
Researcher
Chiara Brück (Erasmus University Medical Center)
Publisher
Centerdata
Copyright
© 2026 Centerdata
DOI
https://doi.org/10.57990/7vyy-ww44
Funding Organization
ODISSEI, OCW (Domeinplan SSH), Erasmus University Medical Center

Datasets and documentation

View Documentation

Codebook in English
Codebook in Dutch

Data Files

English SPSS file
English STATA file
English CSV file

Variables

Variable name Variable Label
nomem_encrNumber of the household member encrypted
cal25a_mYear and month of the field work period
cal25a001Random number 1 - 2 to determine order cal25a004 to cal25a008
cal25a002We will now ask you two questions about your understanding of the graphs. Which of the two population groups has the highest healthy life expectancy after this programme?
cal25a003Which of the two population groups gains the greater number of healthy life expectancy from this programme?
cal25a004Question 1 of 5 - Which of these two programmes provides the greatest gain for Group H?
cal25a005Question 2 of 5 - Which of these two programmes maximizes total population health?
cal25a006Question 3 of 5 - Which of these two programmes focuses most on improving healthy life expectancy for Group L?
cal25a007Question 4 of 5 - Which of these two programmes provides the greatest gain for Group L?
cal25a008Question 5 of 5 - Which of these two programmes minimises the gap in life expectancy?
cal25a009Choice 1 of 8 - Which programme should the government choose?
cal25a010Choice 2 of 8 - Which programme should the government choose?
cal25a011Choice 3 of 8 - Which programme should the government choose?
cal25a012Choice 4 of 8 - Which programme should the government choose?
cal25a013Choice 5 of 8 - Which programme should the government choose?
cal25a014Choice 6 of 8 - Which programme should the government choose?
cal25a015Choice 7 of 8 - Which programme should the government choose?
cal25a016Choice 8 of 8 - Which programme should the government choose?
cal25a017Choice 1 of 8 - Which programme should the government choose?
cal25a018Choice 2 of 8 - Now follow seven more questions. You will see that programme A does not change, but programme B changes between questions. Which programme should the government choose?
cal25a019Choice 3 of 8 - Which porgamme should the government choose?
cal25a020Choice 4 of 8 - Which programme should the government choose?
cal25a021Choice 5 of 8 - Which porgamme should the government choose?
cal25a022Choice 6 of 8 - Which programme should the government choose?
cal25a023Choice 7 of 8 - Which programme should the government choose?
cal25a024Choice 8 of 8 - Which programme should the government choose?
cal25a025On a scale of 0 to 10, where would you place your opinion? (reducing health inequalities vs. improving overall health)
cal25a026On a scale of 0 to 10, where would you place your opinion? (reducing income inequality vs. increasing total national income)
cal25a027On a scale of 0 to 10, where would you place your opinion? (reducing health inequalities between rich and poor vs. improving overall health)
cal25a028Which of the pairs of circles below best reflects the extent to which you recognize yourself in the groups below? - Group H (highest healthy life expectancy)
cal25a029Which of the pairs of circles below best reflects the extent to which you recognize yourself in the groups below? - Group L (lowest healthy life expectancy)
cal25a030Which of the pairs of circles below best reflects the extent to which you recognize yourself in the groups below? - Richest fifth of the population
cal25a031Which of the pairs of circles below best reflects the extent to which you recognize yourself in the groups below? - Poorest fifth of the population
cal25a032Imagine the following situation: you have won €1,000 in a lottery. Taking your current situation into account, how much would you donate to charity? How much of the €1,000 would you give to charity?
cal25a033Was it difficult to answer the questions?
cal25a034Were the questions sufficiently clear?
cal25a035Did the questionnaire get you thinking about things?
cal25a036Was it an interesting subject?
cal25a037Did you enjoy answering the questions?
cal25a038Starting date questionnaire
cal25a039Starting time questionnaire
cal25a040End date questionnaire
cal25a041End time questionnaire
cal25a042Duration in seconds

Response Information

Response Overview
Selected number of household members: 1,652 (100.0%)
Non-response: 510 (30.9%)
Response: 1,142 (69.1%)
Complete: 1,101 (66.6%)
Incomplete: 41 (2.5%)
Collection Events
Period
02-06-2025 to 30-06-2025
Sample
Panel members aged 16 and older, stratified sample by age (lftdcat), education (oplcat), and gender.
Collection Mode
Internet Survey
Fieldwork Note
A reminder was sent twice to non-respondents.