Journal article
Missing....presumed at random: Cost-analysis of incomplete data
A Briggs, T Clark, J Wolstenholme, P Clarke
Health Economics | WILEY | Published : 2003
DOI: 10.1002/hec.766
Abstract
When collecting patient-level resource use data for statistical analysis, for some patients and in some categories of resource use, the required count will not be observed. Although this problem must arise in most reported economic evaluations containing patient-level data, it is rare for authors to detail how the problem was overcome. Statistical packages may default to handling missing data through a so-called 'complete case analysis', while some recent cost-analyses have appeared to favour an 'available case' approach. Both of these methods are problematic: complete case analysis is inefficient and is likely to be biased; available case analysis, by employing different numbers of observat..
View full abstract