Yes. There is a large range of such numbers. I am not sure of the right tradeoff. I would intuitively expect a billion therapy sessions to be an overestimate (i.e. clearly more valuable than the life of a child), but I didn’t do any calculations. A thousand seems like an underestimate, but again who knows (I didn’t do any calculations). HLI is claiming (checks notes) ~12.
To flip the question: Do you think there’s a number you would reject for how many people treated with psychotherapy would be worth the death of one child, even if some seemingly-fancy analysis based on survey data backed it up? Do you ever look at the results of an analysis and go “this must be wrong,” or is that just something the community refuses to do on principle?
Yes. There is a large range of such numbers. I am not sure of the right tradeoff. I would intuitively expect a billion therapy sessions to be an overestimate (i.e. clearly more valuable than the life of a child), but I didn’t do any calculations. A thousand seems like an underestimate, but again who knows (I didn’t do any calculations). HLI is claiming (checks notes) ~12.
To flip the question: Do you think there’s a number you would reject for how many people treated with psychotherapy would be worth the death of one child, even if some seemingly-fancy analysis based on survey data backed it up? Do you ever look at the results of an analysis and go “this must be wrong,” or is that just something the community refuses to do on principle?