Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London, London, UK.
Warwick Business School, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK.
Br J Ophthalmol. 2018 Aug;102(8):1014-1020. doi: 10.1136/bjophthalmol-2017-311778. Epub 2018 May 23.
Conflicting evidence exists regarding the impact of financial incentives on encouraging attendance at medical screening appointments. The primary aim was to determine whether financial incentives increase attendance at diabetic eye screening in persistent non-attenders.
A three-armed randomised controlled trial was conducted in London in 2015. 1051 participants aged over 16 years, who had not attended eye screening appointments for 2 years or more, were randomised (1.4:1:1 randomisation ratio) to receive the usual invitation letter (control), an offer of £10 cash for attending screening (fixed incentive) or a 1 in 100 chance of winning £1000 (lottery incentive) if they attend. The primary outcome was the proportion of invitees attending screening, and a comparative analysis was performed to assess group differences. Pairwise comparisons of attendance rates were performed, using a conservative Bonferroni correction for independent comparisons.
34/435 (7.8%) of control, 17/312 (5.5%) of fixed incentive and 10/304 (3.3%) of lottery incentive groups attended. Participants who received any incentive were significantly less likely to attend their appointment compared with controls (risk ratio (RR)=0.56; 95% CI 0.34 to 0.92). Those in the probabilistic incentive group (RR=0.42; 95% CI 0.18 to 0.98), but not the fixed incentive group (RR=1.66; 95% CI 0.65 to 4.21), were significantly less likely to attend than those in the control group.
Financial incentives, particularly lottery-based incentives, attract fewer patients to diabetic eye screening than standard invites in this population. Financial incentives should not be used to promote screening unless tested in context, as they may negatively affect attendance rates.
关于经济激励对鼓励参加医学筛查预约的影响,现有证据相互矛盾。本研究主要目的是确定经济激励是否会增加持续未就诊者的糖尿病眼病筛查参与率。
本研究于 2015 年在伦敦开展了一项三臂随机对照试验。共纳入 1051 名年龄在 16 岁以上、2 年以上未参加过眼部筛查的参与者,按 1.4:1:1 的比例随机分配(随机分组比)至接受常规邀请信(对照组)、参加筛查可获得 10 英镑现金(固定激励)或参加筛查有 1/100 的机会赢得 1000 英镑(彩票激励)。主要结局是受邀者参加筛查的比例,采用比较分析评估组间差异。采用保守的 Bonferroni 校正进行独立比较,对参加率进行两两比较。
对照组、固定激励组和彩票激励组分别有 34/435(7.8%)、17/312(5.5%)和 10/304(3.3%)的参与者参加了筛查。与对照组相比,任何激励组的参与者参加预约的可能性均显著降低(风险比(RR)=0.56;95%置信区间 0.34 至 0.92)。与对照组相比,彩票激励组(RR=0.42;95%置信区间 0.18 至 0.98),而不是固定激励组(RR=1.66;95%置信区间 0.65 至 4.21),参加筛查的可能性显著降低。
在该人群中,经济激励,特别是基于彩票的激励,吸引的糖尿病眼病筛查患者比标准邀请少。除非在特定环境下进行测试,否则不应使用经济激励来促进筛查,因为它们可能会降低参与率。