AbstractObjectivesUncertainty remains about whether personal financial incentives could achieve sustained changes in health-related behaviors that would reduce the fast-growing global non-communicable disease burden. This review aims to estimate whether: i. financial incentives achieve sustained changes in smoking, eating, alcohol consumption and physical activity; ii. effectiveness is modified by (a) the target behavior, (b) incentive value and attainment certainty, (c) recipients' deprivation level.MethodsMultiple sources were searched for trials offering adults financial incentives and assessing outcomes relating to pre-specified behaviors at a minimum of six months from baseline. Analyses included random-effects meta-analyses and meta-r...
Background:The use of financial incentives or pay-for-performance programs for health care providers...
Background: Financial incentives may improve the initiation and engagement of behaviour change that ...
While we agree that personal financial incentives (PFIs) may have some utility in public health inte...
OBJECTIVES: Uncertainty remains about whether personal financial incentives could achieve sustained ...
Financial incentive interventions have been suggested as one method of promoting healthy behaviour c...
<div><p>Background</p><p>Financial incentive interventions have been suggested as one method of prom...
Personal financial incentives are increasingly being used to motivate patients and general populatio...
BACKGROUND: To motivate people to lead a healthier life and to engage in disease prevention, explici...
Background Incentives are central to economics and are used across the public and private sectors to...
Abstract While we agree that personal financial incentives (PFIs) may have some utility in public he...
While we agree that personal financial incentives (PFIs) may have some utility in public health inte...
Unhealthy behaviors, such as smoking, poor diet, and sedentary lifestyles, account for as much as 40...
Health inequalities and user financial incentives to encourage health-related behavior change are tw...
Health inequalities and user financial incentives to encourage health-related behavior change are tw...
Objective: To review existing evidence on the potential of incentives to undermine or “crowd out ” i...
Background:The use of financial incentives or pay-for-performance programs for health care providers...
Background: Financial incentives may improve the initiation and engagement of behaviour change that ...
While we agree that personal financial incentives (PFIs) may have some utility in public health inte...
OBJECTIVES: Uncertainty remains about whether personal financial incentives could achieve sustained ...
Financial incentive interventions have been suggested as one method of promoting healthy behaviour c...
<div><p>Background</p><p>Financial incentive interventions have been suggested as one method of prom...
Personal financial incentives are increasingly being used to motivate patients and general populatio...
BACKGROUND: To motivate people to lead a healthier life and to engage in disease prevention, explici...
Background Incentives are central to economics and are used across the public and private sectors to...
Abstract While we agree that personal financial incentives (PFIs) may have some utility in public he...
While we agree that personal financial incentives (PFIs) may have some utility in public health inte...
Unhealthy behaviors, such as smoking, poor diet, and sedentary lifestyles, account for as much as 40...
Health inequalities and user financial incentives to encourage health-related behavior change are tw...
Health inequalities and user financial incentives to encourage health-related behavior change are tw...
Objective: To review existing evidence on the potential of incentives to undermine or “crowd out ” i...
Background:The use of financial incentives or pay-for-performance programs for health care providers...
Background: Financial incentives may improve the initiation and engagement of behaviour change that ...
While we agree that personal financial incentives (PFIs) may have some utility in public health inte...