Carrots, Sticks and False Carrots: How high should weight control wellness incentives be? Findings from a population-level experiment.

Harald Schmidt
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Abstract

Employers are increasingly using wellness incentives, including penalties for unhealthy behavior. Survey data suggests that people are willing to accept the principle of penalizing those perceived to take health risks, but the equally relevant question of the magnitude of acceptable penalties is unclear. While the principle of penalizing overweight and obese people has some support, findings from a population-level experiment (n=1,000) suggest that the acceptable size of penalties is comparatively small, around $50: more than 10-fold below levels favored by advocates. Reward-based incentives are favored over penalty-based ones by a factor of 4. Of two different ways of framing penalty programs, poorer and higher weight groups appear to find the one that is more overtly penalizing less acceptable. Levels of incentives matter on effectiveness as well as on ethical grounds, as it cannot be assumed that it is equally easy for all to meet health targets to secure a benefit or avoid a penalty. Programs should be designed to engage, not to frustrate those most in need of health improvement. Employee involvement in determining incentive types and levels, and explicit justification for program design can help both employees and employers to reap benefits.

胡萝卜,大棒和假胡萝卜:控制体重的健康激励应该有多高?一项人口水平实验的结果。
雇主们越来越多地采用健康激励措施,包括对不健康行为的处罚。调查数据表明,人们愿意接受惩罚那些被认为冒健康风险的人的原则,但同样相关的可接受惩罚的程度问题尚不清楚。虽然惩罚超重和肥胖者的原则得到了一些支持,但一项人口水平实验(n= 1000)的结果表明,可接受的罚款金额相对较小,约为50美元,比倡导者所赞成的水平低10倍以上。以奖励为基础的激励比以惩罚为基础的激励受欢迎的程度是前者的4倍。在制定惩罚计划的两种不同方式中,较贫穷和体重较高的群体似乎觉得更公开的惩罚方式更难以接受。激励措施的水平既关系到有效性,也关系到道德原因,因为不能假设所有人都同样容易实现健康目标,从而获得利益或避免惩罚。项目的设计应该是为了吸引那些最需要健康改善的人,而不是为了挫败他们。员工参与决定激励类型和水平,以及明确的计划设计理由,可以帮助员工和雇主都获得利益。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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