1. The Role of Behavioral Economics in Improving Cardiovascular Health Behaviors and Outcomes
- Author
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Kevin G. Volpp, Allison J. Hare, Mitesh S. Patel, and Srinath Adusumalli
- Subjects
Psychological Aspects of Cardiovascular Diseases (A Steptoe and IM Kronish , Section Editors) ,Healthcare delivery design ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Applied psychology ,Health Behavior ,Psychological intervention ,Cardiology ,Context (language use) ,Behavioral economics ,Clinical endpoint ,Medicine ,Humans ,Quality (business) ,Set (psychology) ,Pandemics ,Health policy ,media_common ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Economics, Behavioral ,COVID-19 ,Cardiovascular health ,Framing (social sciences) ,Financial incentives ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Purpose of Review Behavioral economics represents a promising set of principles to inform the design of health-promoting interventions. Techniques from the field have the potential to increase quality of cardiovascular care given suboptimal rates of guideline-directed care delivery and patient adherence to optimal health behaviors across the spectrum of cardiovascular care delivery. Recent Findings Cardiovascular health-promoting interventions have demonstrated success in using a wide array of principles from behavioral economics, including loss framing, social norms, and gamification. Such approaches are becoming increasingly sophisticated and focused on clinical cardiovascular outcomes in addition to health behaviors as a primary endpoint. Many approaches can be used to improve patient decisions remotely, which is particularly useful given the shift to virtual care in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. Summary Numerous applications for behavioral economics exist in the cardiovascular care delivery space, though more work is needed before we will have a full understanding of ways to best leverage such applications in each clinical context.
- Published
- 2021