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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 7/2017

01-07-2017 | Original Research

Can Appealing to Patient Altruism Reduce Overuse of Health Care Services? An Experimental Survey

Authors: Kevin R. Riggs, MD, MPH, Peter A. Ubel, MD, Brendan Saloner, PhD

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 7/2017

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Abstract

Background

A challenge to reducing overuse of health services is communicating recommendations against unnecessary health services to patients. The predominant approach has been to highlight the limited benefit and potential harm of such services for that patient, but the prudent use of health resources can also benefit others. Whether appealing to patient altruism can reduce overuse is unknown.

Objective

To determine whether altruistic appeals reduce hypothetical requests for overused services and affect physician ratings.

Design

Experimental survey using hypothetical vignettes describing three overused health services (antibiotics for acute sinusitis, imaging for acute low back pain, and annual exams for healthy adults).

Participants

U.S. adults recruited from Research Now, an online panel of individuals compensated for performing academic and marketing research surveys.

Interventions

In the control version of the vignettes, the physician’s rationale for recommending against the service was the minimal benefit and potential for harm. In the altruism version, the rationale additionally included potential benefit to others by forgoing that service.

Main Measures

Differences in requests for overused services and physician ratings between participants randomized to the control and altruism versions of the vignettes.

Key Results

A total of 1001 participants were included in the final analyses. There were no significant differences in requests for overused services for any of the clinical scenarios (P values ranged from 0.183 to 0.547). Physician ratings were lower in the altruism version for the acute sinusitis (6.68 vs. 7.03, P = 0.012) and back pain scenarios (6.14 vs. 6.83, P < 0.001), and marginally lower for the healthy adult scenario (5.27 vs. 5.57, P = 0.084).

Conclusions

In this experimental survey, altruistic appeals delivered by physicians did not reduce requests for overused services, and resulted in more negative physician ratings. Further studies are warranted to determine whether alternative methods of appealing to patient altruism can reduce overuse.
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Metadata
Title
Can Appealing to Patient Altruism Reduce Overuse of Health Care Services? An Experimental Survey
Authors
Kevin R. Riggs, MD, MPH
Peter A. Ubel, MD
Brendan Saloner, PhD
Publication date
01-07-2017
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 7/2017
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-017-4002-5

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