Professor Marjon Van der Pol

Professor Marjon Van der Pol
Professor Marjon Van der Pol
Professor Marjon Van der Pol

Chair in Health Economics

Accepting PhDs

About
Email Address
m.vanderpol@abdn.ac.uk
Telephone Number
+44 (0)1224 437172
Office Address

Health Economics Research Unit

Foresterhill, Polwarth building

Aberdeen AB25 2ZD

School/Department
School of Medicine, Medical Sciences and Nutrition

Biography

Marjon is a Professor of Health Economics and the director of teaching in HERU. She joined HERU as a Senior Research Fellow in May 2004. She worked in HERU from 1995 to 2001 as a Research Fellow and at the University of Calgary (Canada) from 2002 to 2004 as Assistant Professor. 

Marjon's main research interest is in the relationship between time and risk preferences and health (behaviours). Current research focuses on the robustness of time preference measurement, eliciting time preferences for wellbeing and developing health behaviour interventions that draw on the concept of time preference.  Marjon also has an interest in the use financial incentives in health behaviours and conducts research into the cost-effectiveness of health interventions. Research focuses on interventions that have an important behavioural component including weight loss, dental care and self-management of chronic conditions.

 

RePEc

 

Qualifications

  • PhD Economics 
    2000 - University of Aberdeen 
  • MSc Business economics 
    1995 - University of Nijmegen (Netherlands) 

External Memberships

Associate Editor for Health Economics

Steering Group for Scottish Health Economics (SHE)

MRC Skills Development Panel, Deputy Chair, 2016 – 2020

Research

Research Overview

Marjon's main research interest is in the relationship between time and risk preferences and health (behaviours). Current research focuses on the robustness of time preference measurement, eliciting time preferences for wellbeing and developing health behaviour interventions that draw on the concept of time preference.  Marjon also has an interest in the use financial incentives in health behaviours and conducts research into the cost-effectiveness of health interventions. Research focuses on interventions that have an important behavioural component including weight loss, dental care and self-management of chronic conditions.

Research Areas

Accepting PhDs

I am currently accepting PhDs in Applied Health Sciences, Economics.


Please get in touch if you would like to discuss your research ideas further.

Email Me

Applied Health Sciences

Supervising
Accepting PhDs

Economics

Supervising
Accepting PhDs

Research Specialisms

  • Applied Economics
  • Health and Welfare

Our research specialisms are based on the Higher Education Classification of Subjects (HECoS) which is HESA open data, published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence.

Supervision

My current supervision areas are: Applied Health Sciences, Economics.

Carolina Yanez Contreras, Valuing the benefits of oral health interventions for use in University of Aberdeen, 2022-

Melanie Antunes, Public and patients preferences for social prescribing. University of Aberdeen, 2019-.

Xuemin Zhu, The role of the physician’s risk and time preferences and personality in clinical decision making. University of Aberdeen, Awarded 2022.

Uma Thomas, Seeing into the future: the role of time preferences in changing health behaviours. University of Aberdeen, Awarded 2021.

Dwayne Boyers, Measuring value within an economic evaluation framework: a case study of dental care, University of Aberdeen, awarded 2019.

Laura Dysart, Economic methods to optimise self management, University of Aberdeen, awarded 2018.

Alastair Irvine, Hyperbolic discounting in health decision making; examining patients’ and doctors’ time preferences in relation to adherence, University of Aberdeen, Awarded 2018.

Ewan Gray, Intertemporal preferences for future health events, University of Aberdeen, awarded 2012.

Graham Scotland, Valuing outcomes in economic evaluations of maternal and reproductive health care interventions, University of Aberdeen, awarded 2011.

Funding and Grants

Effectiveness and cost effectiveness of text message and endowment incentives for weight management in men with obesity: the Game of Stones randomised controlled trial.  NIHR Public Health Research £1,669,377, 2020-2024, Co-I.

Pulpotomy for the management of irreversible pulpitis in mature teeth (Pulpotomy for Irreversible Pulpitis - PIP Trial) NIHR HTA £1,996,749, 2020-2024, Co-I.

Selective Caries Removal in Permanent Teeth (Script). NIHR HTA £2,305,508, 2019-2024, Co-I

Feasibility study of how best to engage obese men in narrative SMS (short message system) and incentive interventions for weight loss, to inform a future effectiveness and cost- effectiveness trial. NIHR Public Health Research Programme, £490,970, 2016-2018, Co-I.

INTERVAL Dental Recalls Trial: full trial follow-on. NIHR HTA. £2,670,030. 2011-2018, Co-I.

Improving the Quality of Dentistry (IQuaD): A randomised controlled trial comparing oral hygiene advice and periodontal instrumentation for the prevention and management of periodontal disease in dentate adults attending dental primary care. NIHR HTA £2,447,081. 2011-2017, Co-I.

Avoidable Scottish Hospitalisations (ASH). CSO, £187,821 . 2013-2015, PI.

Can eliciting and addressing health-related goals improve asthma control and asthma-related quality of life? Feasibility Phase II pilot randomised controlled trial of a brief intervention. CSO, £176,957. 2012-2013, Co-I.

Are ‘potentially preventable hospitalisations’ a valid measure of the quality and affordability of primary and community care in Australia? NHMRC (National Health Medical Research Council, Australia). $AUD 387,140. 2012-2014, Co-I.

Improving the Efficient and Equitable Care of Patients with Chronic Medical Conditions Interdisciplinary Chronic Disease Collaboration (ICDC). Alberta Heritage for Medical Research (Canada), Interdisciplinary team grant, $5,854,920. 2009-2014, Co-I.

The role of elective neck dissection in patients with early oral squamous cell carcinoma (1- 3cm primary size) and no clinical evidence of lymph node metastases in the neck (N0) (Acronym - SEND), CRUK, £743,296. 2007-2014, Co-I.

Improving health and health behaviours through serious games. Royal Society of Edinburgh.

£4,500. 2011-2012, Co-I.

The use of global position satellite tracking in wandering patients with dementia: feasibility study. CSO, £46,685. 2011-2012, Co-I.

An evaluation to assess the effectiveness of ‘Quit 4 U’.    NHS Health Scotland, £135,000. 2009-2012, Co-I.

Telemetric supported self-monitoring of long-term conditions. CSO NHS Applied Research Programme grant, £930,277. 2008-2012, Co-I.

INTERVAL Dental Recalls Trial: a feasibility study and follow-on. NIHR HTA. £596,212. 2009-2011, Co-I.

A randomized control trial of the effect of exercise capacity in older patients with heart failure. CSO. £213,465. 2007-2010, Co-I.

Economic evaluation of tele-endoscopy. Scottish Centre for Telehealth. £12,643. 2008-2009, PI.

Multi-method study of telehomecare video-visits in rural Alberta. Canadian Institute of Health Research, $420,000. 2003-2006, Co-I.

Eliciting public’s preferences for priority setting of new pharmaceuticals. Institute of Health Economics, Edmonton, $30,249. 2005-2006, CO-I.

Valuation of time spent on waiting lists: an economics approach. Western Canada Waiting List Project. $9,950. 2003-2004, Co-I.

Eliciting preferences for new interventions: a comparison of decision makers and the public with regards to priority setting. Institute of Health Economics, Edmonton, $9,950. 2003, Co- I.

Teaching

Teaching Responsibilities

Director of Teaching, HERU

Publications

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  • Extrinsic Goals and Time Tradeoff

    Pol van der, M., Shiell, A.
    Medical Decision Making, vol. 27, no. 4, pp. 406-413
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Time preference bias in Time Trade Off

    Pol van der, M., Roux, L.
    European Journal of Health Economics, vol. 6, no. 2, pp. 107-111
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Repeated follow-up as a method for reducing non-trading behaviour in discrete choice experiments

    Cairns, J. A., Pol van der, M.
    Social Science & Medicine, vol. 58, no. 11, pp. 2211-2218
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • A comparison of the discounted utility model and hyperbolic discounting models in the case of social and private intertemporal preferences for health

    Pol van der, M., Cairns, J. A.
    Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, vol. 49, no. 1, pp. 79-96
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Decision making heuristics and the elicitation of preferences: being fast and frugal about the future

    Cairns, J. A., Pol van der, M., Lloyd, A.
    Health Economics, vol. 11, no. 7, pp. 655-658
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Estimating time preferences for health using discrete choice experiments

    Pol van der, M., Cairns, J. A.
    Social Science & Medicine, vol. 52, no. 9, pp. 1459-1470
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Valuing future private and social benefits: The discounted utility model versus hyperbolic discounting models

    Cairns, J., Pol van der, M.
    Journal of Economic Psychology, vol. 21, no. 2, pp. 191-205
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Negative and zero time preference for health

    Pol van der, M. M., Cairns, J. A.
    Health Economics, vol. 9, no. 2, pp. 171-175
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • The estimation of marginal time preference in a UK-wide sample (TEMPUS) project: a review

    Cairns, J. A., van der Pol, M.
    Health Technology Assessment, vol. 4, no. 1
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Do people value their own future health differently from others' future health?

    Cairns, J., Pol van der, M.
    Medical Decision Making, vol. 19, no. 4, pp. 466-472
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
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