Promoting Healthy Childhood Behaviors With Financial Incentives: A Narrative Review of Key Considerations and Design Features for Future Research.

Acad Pediatr

Department of Pediatrics, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania (CC Kenyon, BP Jenssen, and VA Miller), Philadelphia Pa; Division of Adolescent Medicine, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (VA Miller), Philadelphia Pa.

Published: March 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • In the last decade, research has increasingly focused on using financial incentives to encourage healthy behaviors, especially in adults, but the implications for children remain less explored.
  • Five key considerations for applying these incentives in children are outlined, including their impact on intrinsic motivation, ethical concerns, child development stages, effects on health disparities, and funding for effective programs.
  • Current studies indicate that, while the research on financial incentives for children is limited, immediate small incentives may be more effective than larger delayed ones, and there is no clear advantage to loss-framed incentives over gain-framed ones.

Article Abstract

In the last decade, there has been a robust increase in research using financial incentives to promote healthy behaviors as behavioral economics and new monitoring technologies have been applied to health behaviors. Most studies of financial incentives on health behaviors have focused on adults, yet many unhealthy adult behaviors have roots in childhood and adolescence. The use of financial incentives is an attractive but controversial strategy in childhood. In this review, we first propose 5 general considerations in designing and applying incentive interventions to children. These include: 1) the potential impact of incentives on intrinsic motivation, 2) ethical concerns about incentives promoting undue influence, 3) the importance of child neurodevelopmental stage, 4) how incentive interventions may influence health disparities, and 5) how to finance effective programs. We then highlight empirical findings from randomized trials investigating key design features of financial incentive interventions, including framing (loss vs gain), timing (immediate vs delayed), and magnitude (incentive size) effects on a range of childhood behaviors from healthy eating to adherence to glycemic control in type 1 diabetes. Though the current research base on these subjects in children is limited, we found no evidence suggesting that loss-framed incentives perform better than gain-framed incentives in children and isolated studies from healthy food choice experiments support the use of immediate, small incentives versus delayed, larger incentives. Future research on childhood incentives should compare the effectiveness of gain versus loss-framing and focus on which intervention characteristics lead to sustained behavior change and habit formation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8844312PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.acap.2021.08.010DOI Listing

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