School of Nursing, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America.
The Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 Oct 11;16(10):e0257320. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0257320. eCollection 2021.
Rates of chronic pain and daily opioid use are higher among veterans relative to civilian populations. Increasing physical activity can reduce pain severity and decrease opioid use among patients with chronic pain. Behavioral economic strategies can improve physical activity levels but have been undertested in veterans with chronic pain. The objective of this study was to evaluate if a financial incentive combined with a loss aversion component-a "regret lottery" in which veterans could win money if they met a set goal or told how much they could have won had they met their goal-would increase physical activity levels among veterans with chronic pain. A 12-week single-blinded randomized controlled trial (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT04013529) was designed. Veterans with chronic pain (N = 40) receiving care at a specialty pain clinic were eligible for participation, and were randomly assigned (1:1) to either (a) activity trackers and daily text message reminders to increase physical activity ("control arm"), or (b) the same plus a weekly regret lottery ("intervention arm"). For those in the intervention arm, participants who met their activity goal, had a chance to win a small ($30) or large ($100) gift card incentive; those who did not meet their goals were informed of what they would have won had they met their goal. The primary outcome, physical activity, was measured using self-reported physical activity and step counts using activity trackers. Secondary outcomes included changes in physical function, chronic pain severity, depression and opioid use. The sample was primarily white, male and disabled, with an average age of 57 years. No between-arm differences were noted for physical activity, physical function, chronic pain severity, depression or opioid use. Regret lottery-based approaches may be ineffective at increasing physical activity levels in veterans with chronic pain. Trial Registry: NCT04013529.
慢性疼痛和日常阿片类药物使用的比率在退伍军人中相对高于平民人口。增加身体活动可以减轻疼痛严重程度,并减少慢性疼痛患者的阿片类药物使用。行为经济学策略可以提高身体活动水平,但在患有慢性疼痛的退伍军人中尚未经过测试。本研究的目的是评估财务激励与损失厌恶因素(如果退伍军人达到设定目标,他们可以赢得金钱,或者如果他们达到目标,他们可以赢得多少钱的“遗憾彩票”)相结合是否会增加患有慢性疼痛的退伍军人的身体活动水平。设计了一项为期 12 周的单盲随机对照试验(ClinicalTrials.gov:NCT04013529)。在一家专业疼痛诊所接受治疗的慢性疼痛退伍军人(N=40)有资格参加,他们被随机分配(1:1)到以下两组之一:(a)活动跟踪器和每天的短信提醒以增加身体活动(“对照组”),或(b)相同的外加每周遗憾彩票(“干预组”)。对于干预组中的参与者,如果达到活动目标,他们有机会赢得一张小($30)或大($100)礼品卡奖励;如果未达到目标,则告知他们如果达到目标本可以赢得什么。主要结果是使用自我报告的身体活动和活动跟踪器测量的身体活动。次要结果包括身体功能、慢性疼痛严重程度、抑郁和阿片类药物使用的变化。该样本主要是白人、男性和残疾,平均年龄为 57 岁。在身体活动、身体功能、慢性疼痛严重程度、抑郁或阿片类药物使用方面,两组之间没有差异。基于遗憾彩票的方法可能无法有效提高慢性疼痛退伍军人的身体活动水平。试验注册:NCT04013529。