Changing health behaviours in rheumatology: an introduction to behavioural economics

被引:0
作者
Alexis Ogdie
David A. Asch
机构
[1] University of Pennsylvania,Departments of Medicine and Epidemiology, Division of Rheumatology, Perelman School of Medicine
[2] University of Pennsylvania,Perelman School of Medicine and the Wharton School
[3] Cpl Michael J Crescenz VA Medical Center,undefined
来源
Nature Reviews Rheumatology | 2020年 / 16卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Although the management of patients with rheumatic diseases has evolved substantially over the past 20 to 30 years, lifestyle changes (such as weight reduction, physical activity and medication adherence) remain an important and unmet challenge in improving patient outcomes. The field of behavioural economics considers the many ways that individuals behave irrationally and uses the predictability of these patterns to create opportunities to anticipate and avoid or harness these behaviours to improve patient outcomes. Existing among other motivational approaches, the concepts in behavioural economics have only been applied to health care in the past 10 to 15 years. Although few published examples have applied behavioural economic concepts in the management of patients with rheumatic diseases specifically, these concepts have been applied in other chronic diseases, and such interventions could also be applicable in rheumatology. In this Perspectives article, we introduce six principles in behavioural economics (loss aversion, framing effect, present bias, status quo bias, time inconsistency and social normalization), discuss how these concepts have been addressed in other fields and examine their potential application in rheumatology. Using physical activity as an example, we describe how these concepts could be applied to promote healthy behaviour in patients with inflammatory arthritis.
引用
收藏
页码:53 / 60
页数:7
相关论文
共 144 条
[1]  
Rehman T(2016)Historical context of behavioral economics Intellect. Econ. 10 128-132
[2]  
Stevens J(2015)Behavioral economics strategies for promoting adherence to sleep interventions Sleep Med. Rev. 23 20-27
[3]  
Matjasko JL(2016)Applying behavioral economics to public health policy: illustrative examples and promising directions Am. J. Prev. Med. 50 S13-S19
[4]  
Cawley JH(2017)A behavioral blueprint for improving health care policy Behav. Sci. Policy. 3 53-66.
[5]  
Baker-Goering MM(2018)Financial incentives for objectively-measured physical activity or weight loss in adults with chronic health conditions: a meta-analysis PLoS One 13 1495-1505
[6]  
Yokum DV(2018)Cost-effectiveness of health coaching and financial incentives to promote physical activity after total knee replacement Osteoarthr. Cartil. 26 263-291
[7]  
Loewenstein GH(1979)Prospect Theory: an analysis of decision under risk Econometrica 47 385-394
[8]  
Gong Y(2016)Framing financial incentives to increase physical activity among overweight and obese adults: a randomized, controlled trial Ann. Intern. Med. 164 598-600
[9]  
Trentadue TP(2008)Effect on smoking quit rate of telling patients their lung age: the Step2quit randomised controlled trial Br. Med. J. 336 256-266
[10]  
Shrestha S(2001)The effects of message framing and ethnic targeting on mammography use among low-income women Health Psychol. 20 e176-e181