Blood donations are increasingly important for medical procedures, while meeting demand is challenging. This paper studies the role of spillovers arising from social interactions in the context of voluntary blood donations. We analyze a large scale intervention among pairs of blood donors who live at the same street address. A quasi-random phone call provides the instrument for identifying the extent to which the propensity to donate spills over within these pairs. Spillovers transmit 41% to 46% of the behavioral impulse from one donor to the peer. This creates a significant social multiplier, ranging between 1.7 and 1.85. There is no evidence that these spillovers lead to intertemporal substitution. Taken together, our findings indicate th...
BACKGROUND: The benevolence hypothesis (both donor and recipient gain) suggests that blood donors, c...
Background and Objectives. Why do people donate blood? Altruism is the common answer. However, altru...
In this paper, we use register data on all blood donors (n = 259,172) and changes in geographical lo...
Blood donations are increasingly important for medical procedures, while meeting demand is challengi...
Spillovers of prosocial motivation can enhance the provision of public goods, and have implications ...
We examine how extrinsic incentives affect blood donations through the analysis of 14,000 Red Cross ...
There is a longstanding concern that material rewards might undermine pro-social motivations, thereb...
High-cost cooperation directed towards strangers is difficult to explain from an evolutionary perspe...
Recent shortages in the supply of blood donations have renewed the interest in how blood donations c...
Does social recognition motivate prosocial individuals? We run large-scale experiments at Italy's ma...
First published online: 15 May 2020Positive feedback about the outcome of volunteers' prosocial acti...
The decision to donate blood and living organs is considered voluntary and altruistic. However, the ...
Allogeneic umbilical cord blood (UCB) donation is a prosocial behavior directed to strangers at some...
BACKGROUND: The benevolence hypothesis (both donor and recipient gain) suggests that blood donors, c...
Background: Against a background of declining blood donor numbers, recruiting new donors is critical...
BACKGROUND: The benevolence hypothesis (both donor and recipient gain) suggests that blood donors, c...
Background and Objectives. Why do people donate blood? Altruism is the common answer. However, altru...
In this paper, we use register data on all blood donors (n = 259,172) and changes in geographical lo...
Blood donations are increasingly important for medical procedures, while meeting demand is challengi...
Spillovers of prosocial motivation can enhance the provision of public goods, and have implications ...
We examine how extrinsic incentives affect blood donations through the analysis of 14,000 Red Cross ...
There is a longstanding concern that material rewards might undermine pro-social motivations, thereb...
High-cost cooperation directed towards strangers is difficult to explain from an evolutionary perspe...
Recent shortages in the supply of blood donations have renewed the interest in how blood donations c...
Does social recognition motivate prosocial individuals? We run large-scale experiments at Italy's ma...
First published online: 15 May 2020Positive feedback about the outcome of volunteers' prosocial acti...
The decision to donate blood and living organs is considered voluntary and altruistic. However, the ...
Allogeneic umbilical cord blood (UCB) donation is a prosocial behavior directed to strangers at some...
BACKGROUND: The benevolence hypothesis (both donor and recipient gain) suggests that blood donors, c...
Background: Against a background of declining blood donor numbers, recruiting new donors is critical...
BACKGROUND: The benevolence hypothesis (both donor and recipient gain) suggests that blood donors, c...
Background and Objectives. Why do people donate blood? Altruism is the common answer. However, altru...
In this paper, we use register data on all blood donors (n = 259,172) and changes in geographical lo...