Carl Tilling
Overview
Explore the profile of Carl Tilling including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles.
Author names and details appear as published. Due to indexing inconsistencies, multiple individuals may share a name, and a single author may have variations. MedLuna displays this data as publicly available, without modification or verification
Snapshot
Snapshot
Articles
7
Citations
167
Followers
0
Related Specialties
Related Specialties
Top 10 Co-Authors
Top 10 Co-Authors
Published In
Published In
Affiliations
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Recent Articles
1.
Tilling C, Krol M, Attema A, Tsuchiya A, Brazier J, van Exel J, et al.
Eur J Health Econ
. 2015 Aug;
17(7):801-9.
PMID: 26289341
Several studies have sought to determine the monetary value of health gains expressed as quality adjusted life years (QALYs) gained, predominantly using willingness to pay approaches. However, willingness to pay...
2.
Idris I, Gordon J, Tilling C, Vora J
J Med Econ
. 2014 Nov;
18(4):273-82.
PMID: 25422990
Aim: The aim of this analysis was to investigate total healthcare costs, HbA1c, and weight changes over a 36-month period in patients with type 2 diabetes initiated on NPH or...
3.
Devlin N, Buckingham K, Shah K, Tsuchiya A, Tilling C, Wilkinson G, et al.
Health Econ
. 2012 Jun;
22(5):517-32.
PMID: 22715069
'Lead Time' TTO improves upon conventional TTO by providing a uniform method for eliciting positive and negative values. This research investigates (i) the values generated from different combinations of time...
4.
Tilling C, Krol M, Tsuchiya A, Brazier J, van Exel J, Brouwer W
Pharmacoeconomics
. 2011 Nov;
30(1):47-61.
PMID: 22066754
Background: An important methodological issue in economic evaluations of healthcare is how to include productivity costs (the costs related to reduced productivity due to illness, disability and premature death). Traditionally,...
5.
Devlin N, Tsuchiya A, Buckingham K, Tilling C
Health Econ
. 2011 Feb;
20(3):348-61.
PMID: 21308856
The way time trade off (TTO) values are elicited for states of health considered 'worse than being dead' has important implications for the mean values used in economic evaluation. Conventional...
6.
Tilling C, Devlin N, Tsuchiya A, Buckingham K
Med Decis Making
. 2010 Jan;
30(5):610-9.
PMID: 20068144
Background: The time tradeoff (TTO) method of preference elicitation allows respondents to value a state as worse than dead, generally either through the Torrance protocol or the Measurement and Valuation...
7.
Tilling C, Krol M, Tsuchiya A, Brazier J, Brouwer W
Value Health
. 2009 Oct;
13(2):298-305.
PMID: 19804433
Background: In 1996 the Washington Panel controversially recommended valuing productivity costs (PC) in terms of quality-adjusted life years. The Panel's assumption that respondents in health state valuation (HSV) exercises take...