心血管疾病患者对使用财务激励来改变健康行为的看法:存款合同是否可以接受?

D.R. de Buisonjé , T. Reijnders , T.R. Cohen Rodrigues , I. van den Broek , R.A. Kraaijenhagen , V.R. Janssen , H.M.C Kemps , A.W.M. Evers
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景迫切需要找到新的方法来改善心血管疾病患者对健康生活方式的长期坚持。存款合同(一种参与者自己存款的经济激励)既便宜又有效,但CVD患者的可接受性尚不清楚。本研究调查了CVD患者对体育活动的存款合同干预的可接受性。方法我们通过荷兰CVD患者组织的Harteraad患者小组接触CVD患者,并要求他们填写在线调查。总共(N=659)名平均年龄为66.2岁的CVD患者完成了调查。该调查评估了存款合同的可接受性、对体育活动行为变化的存款合同具体示例的反应以及实施的适当时机。结果总体而言,一半的参与者(45.6%)确认需要额外的承诺来维持生活方式的改变。然而,一小部分样本相信赔钱可能是一种激励(18.8%),并表示他们愿意自己存款(13.2%)。在回答体育活动存款合同的具体例子时,四分之一的样本(26.2%)表示他们有机会参与。此外,27.1%的参与者认为存款合同有效,27.4%的参与者认为可以接受。探索性分析表明,一个由年轻人和受教育程度较低的参与者组成的小组的反应更为积极。关于何时开始签订存款合同的意见不一。结论由于心血管疾病患者的可接受性普遍较低,未来的研究还应研究在没有现金存款要求的情况下利用承诺原则的策略。当在实践中向CVD患者提供存款合同时,我们建议将其作为患者可以选择的现有干预措施的可选、附加元素。
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Cardiovascular disease patients’ views on using financial incentives for health behavior change: Are deposit contracts acceptable?

Background

There is an urgent need to find new approaches that improve long-term adherence to a healthy lifestyle for people with cardiovascular disease (CVD). Deposit contracts (a financial incentive in which the participant deposits own money) are inexpensive and effective, but acceptability among CVD patients is unclear. This study investigated the acceptability of a deposit contract intervention for physical activity among CVD patients.

Methods

We approached CVD patients through the Harteraad patient panel of the Dutch CVD patient organization and asked them to fill in an online survey. In total (N = 659) CVD patients with a mean age of 66.2 years completed the survey. The survey assessed acceptability of deposit contracts, responses to a concrete example of a deposit contract for physical activity behavior change, and suitable moments for implementation.

Results

Overall, half of the participants (45.6%) confirmed needing extra commitment to maintain lifestyle change. Yet, a small part of the sample was convinced by the idea that losing money could be motivating (18.8%) and indicated that they would be willing to deposit money themselves (13.2%). Responding to a concrete example of a deposit contract for physical activity, a quarter of the sample (26.2%) reported there was a chance they would participate. Furthermore, 27.1% of the participants found the deposit contract effective and 27.4% found it acceptable. Exploratory analyses showed that a subgroup of younger and lower educated participants responded more favorably. Opinions on when to start with a deposit contract were mixed.

Conclusions

Because acceptability was generally found to be low, future research should also investigate strategies to leverage commitment principles for CVD patients without a cash deposit requirement. When deposit contracts are offered to CVD patients in practice, we recommend offering them as an optional, additional element to existing interventions that patients can opt-in to.

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