Heavy Menstrual Bleeding Across the Lifecourse in India and a Discrete Choice Experiment
Nadia Diamond-Smith of the University of California San Francisco in the U.S. will characterize the prevalence and impact of heavy menstrual bleeding as well as treatment preferences in a cohort of women in the state of Rajasthan in India. Building on an ongoing survey, new data will be acquired from 1,500 women in Rajasthan, including newly married women and their mothers-in-law. The prevalence of heavy menstrual bleeding will be determined, and the data will be modeled for its impact on women's physical and mental health. Twenty-five in-depth interviews will be performed, with the information used to design and launch a discrete choice experiment through a survey of 300 women from the cohort with heavy menstrual bleeding. This survey will uncover women's preferences across treatment options for the condition, including their willingness to pay for them, setting the stage for designing treatment programs based on the local context.