Department of Pediatrics, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle.
Center for Child Health, Behavior, and Development, Seattle Children's Research Institute, Seattle, Washington.
JAMA Netw Open. 2019 Mar 1;2(3):e191490. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.1490.
Family-based treatment (FBT) is recommended for childhood obesity, but even when sought, attrition is high. Extrinsic incentives, which have been effective for improving adult health, could improve FBT engagement.
To assess parents' preferences for FBT incentives.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Survey study of parents of children aged 6 to 17 years with obesity (body mass index in ≥95th percentile for age and sex). Parents' preferences for FBT incentive program attributes were assessed in a discrete choice experiment conducted using a nationally representative, web-based survey in March 2018. Attributes included (1) the monetary value of the incentive, (2) the payment structure, (3) the goal being incentivized, and (4) the person(s) being incentivized. A fractional factorial design was used to create a set of profiles representing hypothetical FBT incentives. Parents were presented with 10 pairs of profiles and asked which would most motivate them in FBT. Parents were also asked about preferences between a small, guaranteed incentive and a lottery for a large incentive. Analyses used a hierarchical Bayesian model and linear regressions.
Parents' preference for different incentive program attributes and levels.
The nationally representative survey had a 41.4% eligibility rate (n = 339) and a 89.7% completion rate (n = 304). A total of 53.3% of respondents (weighted percentage) were non-Hispanic white, 42.6% had an annual household income less than $50 000, and 28.3% had a bachelor's degree. Parents preferred higher incentives, although they were willing to accept lower-value incentives if both the parent and the child (vs the child alone) were required to meet the goal (mean difference [MD], -$108; 95% CI, -$132 to -$84), if the incentive used a gain-framed vs loss-framed payment structure (MD, -$72; 95% CI, -$85 to -$59), and if physical activity goals were incentivized over weight loss (MD, -$63; 95% CI, -$82 to -$44) or dietary monitoring (MD, -$5; 95% CI, -$1 to $28). Only 20.6% of parents preferred a lottery over a guaranteed payment. Preferences did not vary among demographic or health subgroups.
In this study, parent-stated preferences did not align with FBT best practices or behavioral economic theory. A randomized clinical trial could examine whether aligning incentives with preferences or best practices would maximize FBT engagement and behavior change.
家庭为基础的治疗(FBT)被推荐用于儿童肥胖症,但即使寻求治疗,流失率也很高。外在激励措施对改善成人健康有效,也可能改善 FBT 的参与度。
评估父母对 FBT 激励措施的偏好。
设计、地点和参与者:这是一项针对 6 至 17 岁肥胖儿童(体重指数处于年龄和性别的第 95 百分位以上)的父母的调查研究。2018 年 3 月,通过一项全国性的网络调查,采用离散选择实验评估了父母对 FBT 激励计划属性的偏好。属性包括(1)激励的货币价值,(2)支付结构,(3)激励的目标,(4)激励的对象。采用分数阶因子设计来创建一组代表假设的 FBT 激励方案的概况。向父母展示了 10 对方案,并询问他们在 FBT 中最受激励的是哪一个。父母还被问及小额、有保证的激励与大额激励的彩票之间的偏好。分析采用分层贝叶斯模型和线性回归。
父母对不同激励计划属性和水平的偏好。
这项全国代表性调查的入选率为 41.4%(n=339),完成率为 89.7%(n=304)。共有 53.3%的受访者(加权百分比)是非西班牙裔白人,42.6%的家庭年收入低于 50000 美元,28.3%的人拥有学士学位。父母更喜欢更高的激励,但如果父母和孩子(而不是孩子自己)都需要达到目标,他们愿意接受较低价值的激励(平均差异[MD],-108 美元;95%置信区间,-132 美元至-84 美元),如果激励措施使用收益框架而非损失框架的支付结构(MD,-72 美元;95%置信区间,-85 美元至-59 美元),如果激励的目标是身体活动而不是减肥(MD,-63 美元;95%置信区间,-82 美元至-44 美元)或饮食监测(MD,-5 美元;95%置信区间,-1 美元至 28 美元),则父母更喜欢激励措施。只有 20.6%的父母更喜欢彩票而不是有保证的支付。偏好在人口统计学或健康亚组之间没有差异。
在这项研究中,父母的意愿偏好与 FBT 的最佳实践或行为经济学理论不符。一项随机临床试验可以检验是否通过使激励措施与偏好或最佳实践相一致,从而最大限度地提高 FBT 的参与度和行为改变。