Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California, United States of America.
Division of Health Policy and Management, School of Public Health University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Jul 6;13(7):e0199833. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0199833. eCollection 2018.
Tools from behavioral economics have been shown to improve health-related behaviors, but the relative efficacy and additive effects of different types of interventions are not well established. We tested the influence of small cash incentives, defaults, and both in combination on increasing patient HIV test acceptance.
We conducted a randomized clinical trial among patients aged 13-64 receiving care in an urban emergency department. Patients were cross-randomized to $0, $1, $5, and $10 incentives, and to opt-in, active-choice, and opt-out test defaults. The primary outcome was the proportion of patients who accepted an HIV test. 4,831 of 8,715 patients accepted an HIV test (55.4%). Those offered no monetary incentive accepted 51.6% of test offers. The $1 treatment did not increase test acceptance (increase 1%; 95% confidence interval [CI] -2.0 to 3.9); the $5 and $10 treatments increased test acceptance rates by 10.5 and 15 percentage points, respectively (95% CI 7.5 to 13.4 and 11.8 to 18.1). Compared to opt-in testing, active-choice testing increased test acceptance by 11.5% (95% CI 9.0 to 14.0), and opt-out testing increased acceptance by 23.9 percentage points (95% CI 21.4 to 26.4).
Small incentives and defaults can both increase patient HIV test acceptance, though when used in combination their effects were less than additive. These tools from behavioral economics should be considered by clinicians and policymakers. How patient groups respond to monetary incentives and/or defaults deserves further investigation for this and other health behaviors.
行为经济学工具已被证明可以改善与健康相关的行为,但不同类型干预措施的相对效果和累加效应尚未得到很好的确立。我们测试了小额现金激励、默认选项以及两者结合使用对提高患者 HIV 检测接受率的影响。
我们在一家城市急诊部门接受治疗的 13-64 岁患者中进行了一项随机临床试验。患者被交叉随机分配到 0 美元、1 美元、5 美元和 10 美元的激励组,以及选择加入、主动选择和默认选择的测试组。主要结果是接受 HIV 检测的患者比例。在 8715 名患者中有 4831 名接受了 HIV 检测(55.4%)。没有提供金钱激励的患者接受了 51.6%的检测邀请。1 美元的治疗方案并未增加检测接受率(增加 1%;95%置信区间 [CI] -2.0 至 3.9);5 美元和 10 美元的治疗方案分别使检测接受率提高了 10.5%和 15 个百分点(95% CI 7.5%至 13.4%和 11.8%至 18.1%)。与选择加入的检测相比,主动选择的检测使检测接受率提高了 11.5%(95% CI 9.0%至 14.0%),而默认选择的检测使接受率提高了 23.9 个百分点(95% CI 21.4%至 26.4%)。
小额激励和默认选项都可以提高患者的 HIV 检测接受率,尽管当它们结合使用时,其效果并不超过累加。这些行为经济学工具应得到临床医生和政策制定者的考虑。对于这种情况和其他健康行为,需要进一步调查患者群体对金钱激励和/或默认选项的反应。