Health & Medicine
Want to Quit Smoking? Financial Incentive Programs are Super Effective
Catherine Griffin
First Posted: May 18, 2015 07:04 AM EDT
Want to quit smoking? If the incentive is high enough, you may be able to. Scientists have found that four different financial incentive programs, each worth roughly $800 over six months, helped more smokers kick the habit than providing free access to behavioral counseling and nicotine replacement therapy.
In order to see if financial incentive could help smokers kick the habit, scientists enrolled 2,538 participants across the United States in the study. These volunteers were then assigned to one of five groups: individual reward (reward based on individual performance), collaborative reward (reward based on group performance), individual deposit (requiring and upfront deposit of $150 with subsequent matching funds), competitive deposit (competing for other participants' deposits and matching fund) or usual care (such as free smoking cessation aids).
So what did they find? Of the participants assigned to the reward-based programs, 90 percent accepted the assignment, compared to just 14 percent of those assigned to the deposit-based programs. About 16 percent assigned to reward programs remained smoke-free for six months, compared with 10 percent in the deposit programs and 6 percent in the usual care groups.
Among the 14 percent of people who accepted deposits, 55 percent of them were smoke-free at six months.
"We found that the reward-based programs were more effective than deposits overall because more people accepted them in the first place," said Scott D. Halpern, one of the researchers, in a news release. "However, among people who would have accepted any program we offered them, the deposit contracts were twice as effective as rewards, and five times more effective than free information and nicotine replacement therapy, likely because they leveraged people's natural aversion to losing money. With such unprecedented rates of success, the trick now is to figure out how to get more people to sign up-to feel like they have skin in the game."
In fact, CVS Health plans to launch a campaign in which all employees who smoke will be able to deposit just $50 and if they test negative for tobacco 12 months later, they will get back their $50 and $700 more.
The findings are published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
For more great science stories and general news, please visit our sister site, Headlines and Global News (HNGN).
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First Posted: May 18, 2015 07:04 AM EDT
Want to quit smoking? If the incentive is high enough, you may be able to. Scientists have found that four different financial incentive programs, each worth roughly $800 over six months, helped more smokers kick the habit than providing free access to behavioral counseling and nicotine replacement therapy.
In order to see if financial incentive could help smokers kick the habit, scientists enrolled 2,538 participants across the United States in the study. These volunteers were then assigned to one of five groups: individual reward (reward based on individual performance), collaborative reward (reward based on group performance), individual deposit (requiring and upfront deposit of $150 with subsequent matching funds), competitive deposit (competing for other participants' deposits and matching fund) or usual care (such as free smoking cessation aids).
So what did they find? Of the participants assigned to the reward-based programs, 90 percent accepted the assignment, compared to just 14 percent of those assigned to the deposit-based programs. About 16 percent assigned to reward programs remained smoke-free for six months, compared with 10 percent in the deposit programs and 6 percent in the usual care groups.
Among the 14 percent of people who accepted deposits, 55 percent of them were smoke-free at six months.
"We found that the reward-based programs were more effective than deposits overall because more people accepted them in the first place," said Scott D. Halpern, one of the researchers, in a news release. "However, among people who would have accepted any program we offered them, the deposit contracts were twice as effective as rewards, and five times more effective than free information and nicotine replacement therapy, likely because they leveraged people's natural aversion to losing money. With such unprecedented rates of success, the trick now is to figure out how to get more people to sign up-to feel like they have skin in the game."
In fact, CVS Health plans to launch a campaign in which all employees who smoke will be able to deposit just $50 and if they test negative for tobacco 12 months later, they will get back their $50 and $700 more.
The findings are published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
For more great science stories and general news, please visit our sister site, Headlines and Global News (HNGN).
See Now: NASA's Juno Spacecraft's Rendezvous With Jupiter's Mammoth Cyclone