A Randomized Trial of Social Comparison Feedback and Financial Incentives to Increase Physical Activity.

Journal: American Journal Of Health Promotion : AJHP
Published:
Abstract

Purpose: To compare the effectiveness of different combinations of social comparison feedback and financial incentives to increase physical activity.

Design: Randomized trial (Clinicaltrials.gov number, NCT02030080). Setting: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Participants: Two hundred eighty-six adults. Interventions: Twenty-six weeks of weekly feedback on team performance compared to the 50th percentile (n = 100) or the 75th percentile (n = 64) and 13 weeks of weekly lottery-based financial incentive plus feedback on team performance compared to the 50th percentile (n = 80) or the 75th percentile (n = 44) followed by 13 weeks of only performance feedback. Measures: Mean proportion of participant-days achieving the 7000-step goal during the 13-week intervention. Analysis: Generalized linear mixed models adjusting for repeated measures and clustering by team.

Results: Compared to the 75th percentile without incentives during the intervention period, the mean proportion achieving the 7000-step goal was significantly greater for the 50th percentile with incentives group (0.45 vs 0.27, difference: 0.18, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.04 to 0.32; P = .012) but not for the 75th percentile with incentives group (0.38 vs 0.27, difference: 0.11, 95% CI: -0.05 to 0.27; P = .19) or the 50th percentile without incentives group (0.30 vs 0.27, difference: 0.03, 95% CI: -0.10 to 0.16; P = .67).

Conclusion: Social comparison to the 50th percentile with financial incentives was most effective for increasing physical activity.

Authors
Mitesh Patel, Kevin Volpp, Roy Rosin, Scarlett Bellamy, Dylan Small, Michele Fletcher, Rosemary Osman Koss, Jennifer Brady, Nancy Haff, Samantha Lee, Lisa Wesby, Karen Hoffer, David Shuttleworth, Devon Taylor, Victoria Hilbert, Jingsan Zhu, Lin Yang, Xingmei Wang, David Asch