Willingness to pay for exercise oncology services: a mixed methods study
Details
Publication Year 2025-01-08,Volume 33,Issue #2,Page 77
Journal Title
Supportive Care in Cancer
Publication Type
Research article
Abstract
PURPOSE: To evaluate cancer patients' willingness to pay for exercise services and oncology health professionals' perception of patients' willingness to pay. METHODS: A mixed-methods design was used. Online questionnaires and semi-structured interviews were administered to people with any type of cancer and oncology health professionals delivering clinical care. Questionnaires assessed patients' willingness to pay for one consultation with a cancer-trained exercise specialist (i.e. exercise physiologist/physiotherapist) and regular group exercise sessions supervised by cancer-trained exercise specialists. Interviews probed factors associated with the out-of-pocket cost of adopting exercise guidelines. Data were analysed using standard descriptive statistics and an interpretive descriptive approach to qualitative analysis. RESULTS: Participants included 450 cancer patients and 300 oncology health professionals. A randomly selected sub-set of 30 patients and 31 health professionals completed interviews. The majority of patients surveyed would pay for an exercise consultation (94%) and regular group exercise sessions (58.4% extremely likely; 24.7% moderately likely; standard 7-point Likert scale response options). A greater proportion of patients who were employed (97.2% p = 0.030), below average general health (97.0% p = 0.031), were female (96.1% p = 0.013), and insufficiently active (95.3% p = 0.048) were willing to pay for exercise services. Oncology health professionals perceived fewer patients would be willing to pay for exercise services (p < 0.001; consultation = 7.0% extremely likely, 32.7% moderately likely; regular supervised sessions = 5.3% extremely likely; 32.0% moderately likely). CONCLUSIONS: When briefly informed of the benefits and costs of exercise, the majority of patients in this study would pay for cancer-specific exercise services. There is an opportunity to align perceptions of willingness to pay among patients and health professionals involved in their care to help facilitate the uptake of exercise guidelines.
Publisher
Springer Nature
Keywords
Humans; Female; Male; Middle Aged; *Neoplasms/therapy/psychology; Surveys and Questionnaires; Adult; *Exercise Therapy/methods/economics; Aged; Health Expenditures/statistics & numerical data; Cancer; Exercise; Oncology; Physical activity; Willingness to pay
Department(s)
Health Services Research
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