Investigating Rewards and Deposit Contract Financial Incentives for Physical Activity Behavior Change Using a Smartphone App: Randomized Controlled Trial

被引:9
作者
de Buisonje, David R. [1 ]
Reijnders, Thomas [1 ,2 ]
Rodrigues, Talia R. Cohen [1 ]
Prabhakaran, Santhanam [3 ]
Kowatsch, Tobias [3 ,4 ,5 ]
Lipman, Stefan A. [6 ]
Bijmolt, Tammo H. A. [7 ]
Breeman, Linda D. [1 ]
Janssen, Veronica R. [1 ,8 ]
Kraaijenhagen, Roderik A. [9 ]
Kemps, Hareld M. C. [10 ]
Evers, Andrea W. M. [1 ,11 ]
机构
[1] Leiden Univ, Inst Psychol, Hlth Med & Neuropsychol Unit, Wassenaarseweg 52,Room 2A22, NL-2333 AK Leiden, Netherlands
[2] Delft Univ Technol, Fac Ind Design Engn, Dept Human Ctr Design, Delft, Netherlands
[3] Swiss Fed Inst Technol, Dept Management Technol & Econ, Ctr Digital Hlth Intervent, Zurich, Switzerland
[4] Univ Zurich, Inst Implementat Sci Hlth Care, Zurich, Switzerland
[5] Sch Med, Univ St Gallen, St Gallen, Switzerland
[6] Erasmus Univ, Erasmus Sch Hlth Policy & Management, Rotterdam, Netherlands
[7] Univ Groningen, Fac Econ & Business, Groningen, Netherlands
[8] Leiden Univ, Dept Cardiol, Med Ctr, Leiden, Netherlands
[9] Hearts4People Fdn, Amsterdam, Netherlands
[10] Maxima Med Ctr, Dept Cardiol, Veldhoven, Netherlands
[11] Erasmus Univ, Tech Univ Delft, Leiden Univ, Med Delta, Delft, Netherlands
关键词
eHealth; behavior change; rewards; reward learning; financial incentives; deposit contracts; commitment contracts; physical activity; mobile phone; MONETARY CONTINGENCY CONTRACTS; WEIGHT-LOSS; PROGRAM; OVERWEIGHT; STEPS;
D O I
10.2196/38339
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: Financial incentive interventions for improving physical activity have proven to be effective but costly. Deposit contracts (in which participants pledge their own money) could be an affordable alternative. In addition, deposit contracts may have superior effects by exploiting the power of loss aversion. Previous research has often operationalized deposit contracts through loss framing a financial reward (without requiring a deposit) to mimic the feelings of loss involved in a deposit contract. Objective: This study aimed to disentangle the effects of incurring actual losses (through self-funding a deposit contract) and loss framing. We investigated whether incentive conditions are more effective than a no-incentive control condition, whether deposit contracts have a lower uptake than financial rewards, whether deposit contracts are more effective than financial rewards, and whether loss frames are more effective than gain frames. Methods: Healthy participants (N=126) with an average age of 22.7 (SD 2.84) years participated in a 20-day physical activity intervention. They downloaded a smartphone app that provided them with a personalized physical activity goal and either required a _10 (at the time of writing: _1=US $0.98) deposit up front (which could be lost) or provided _10 as a reward, contingent on performance. Daily feedback on incentive earnings was provided and framed as either a loss or gain. We used a 2 (incentive type: deposit or reward) x 2 (feedback frame: gain or loss) between-subjects factorial design with a no-incentive control condition. Our primary outcome was the number of days participants achieved their goals. The uptake of the intervention was a secondary outcome. Results: Overall, financial incentive conditions (mean 13.10, SD 6.33 days goal achieved) had higher effectiveness than the control condition (mean 8.00, SD 5.65 days goal achieved; P=.002; eta p(2)=0.147). Deposit contracts had lower uptake (29/47, 62%) than rewards (50/50, 100%; P<.001; Cramer V=0.492). Furthermore, 2-way analysis of covariance showed that deposit contracts (mean 14.88, SD 6.40 days goal achieved) were not significantly more effective than rewards (mean 12.13, SD 6.17 days goal achieved; P=.17). Unexpectedly, loss frames (mean 10.50, SD 6.22 days goal achieved) were significantly less effective than gain frames (mean 14.67, SD 5.95 days goal achieved; P=.007; eta p(2)=0.155). Conclusions: Financial incentives help increase physical activity, but deposit contracts were not more effective than rewards. Although self-funded deposit contracts can be offered at low cost, low uptake is an important obstacle to large-scale implementation. Unexpectedly, loss framing was less effective than gain framing. Therefore, we urge further research on their boundary conditions before using loss-framed incentives in practice. Because of limited statistical power regarding some research questions, the results of this study should be interpreted with caution, and future work should be done to confirm these findings.
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页数:15
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