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Countering demand for ineffective health remedies: Do consumers respond to risks, lack of benefits, or both?

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Countering demand for ineffective health remedies: Do consumers respond to risks, lack of benefits, or both? / MacFarlane, D.; Hurlstone, M.J.; Ecker, U.K.H.
In: Psychol. Health, Vol. 36, No. 5, 31.05.2021, p. 593-611.

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MacFarlane D, Hurlstone MJ, Ecker UKH. Countering demand for ineffective health remedies: Do consumers respond to risks, lack of benefits, or both? Psychol. Health. 2021 May 31;36(5):593-611. Epub 2020 Jun 8. doi: 10.1080/08870446.2020.1774056

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MacFarlane, D. ; Hurlstone, M.J. ; Ecker, U.K.H. / Countering demand for ineffective health remedies : Do consumers respond to risks, lack of benefits, or both?. In: Psychol. Health. 2021 ; Vol. 36, No. 5. pp. 593-611.

Bibtex

@article{659beaa4f0c349d5b8117dd0b6ac3c95,
title = "Countering demand for ineffective health remedies: Do consumers respond to risks, lack of benefits, or both?",
abstract = "Objective: We tested whether targeting the illusion of causality and/or misperceptions about health risks had the potential to reduce consumer demand for an ineffective health remedy (multivitamin supplements). Design: We adopted a 2 (contingency information: no/yes) × 2 (fear appeal: no/yes) factorial design, with willingness-to-pay as the dependent variable. The contingency information specified, in table format, the number of people reporting a benefit vs. no benefit from both multivitamins and placebo, plus a causal explanation for lack of efficacy over placebo. The fear appeal involved a summary of clinical-trial results that indicated multivitamins can cause health harms. The control condition received only irrelevant information. Main outcome measure: Experimental auctions measured people{\textquoteright}s willingness-to-pay for multivitamins. Experiment 1 (N = 260) elicited hypothetical willingness-to-pay online. Experiment 2 (N = 207) elicited incentivised willingness-to-pay in the laboratory. Results: Compared to a control group, we found independent effects of contingency information (-22%) and the fear appeal (-32%) on willingness-to-pay. The combination of both interventions had the greatest impact (-50%) on willingness-to-pay. Conclusion: We found evidence that consumer choices are influenced by both perceptions of efficacy and risk. The combination of both elements can provide additive effects that appear superior to either approach alone.",
keywords = "complementary and alternative medicine (CAM), fear appeal, health communication, health psychology, risk estimation",
author = "D. MacFarlane and M.J. Hurlstone and U.K.H. Ecker",
year = "2021",
month = may,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1080/08870446.2020.1774056",
language = "English",
volume = "36",
pages = "593--611",
journal = "Psychol. Health",
issn = "0887-0446",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Countering demand for ineffective health remedies

T2 - Do consumers respond to risks, lack of benefits, or both?

AU - MacFarlane, D.

AU - Hurlstone, M.J.

AU - Ecker, U.K.H.

PY - 2021/5/31

Y1 - 2021/5/31

N2 - Objective: We tested whether targeting the illusion of causality and/or misperceptions about health risks had the potential to reduce consumer demand for an ineffective health remedy (multivitamin supplements). Design: We adopted a 2 (contingency information: no/yes) × 2 (fear appeal: no/yes) factorial design, with willingness-to-pay as the dependent variable. The contingency information specified, in table format, the number of people reporting a benefit vs. no benefit from both multivitamins and placebo, plus a causal explanation for lack of efficacy over placebo. The fear appeal involved a summary of clinical-trial results that indicated multivitamins can cause health harms. The control condition received only irrelevant information. Main outcome measure: Experimental auctions measured people’s willingness-to-pay for multivitamins. Experiment 1 (N = 260) elicited hypothetical willingness-to-pay online. Experiment 2 (N = 207) elicited incentivised willingness-to-pay in the laboratory. Results: Compared to a control group, we found independent effects of contingency information (-22%) and the fear appeal (-32%) on willingness-to-pay. The combination of both interventions had the greatest impact (-50%) on willingness-to-pay. Conclusion: We found evidence that consumer choices are influenced by both perceptions of efficacy and risk. The combination of both elements can provide additive effects that appear superior to either approach alone.

AB - Objective: We tested whether targeting the illusion of causality and/or misperceptions about health risks had the potential to reduce consumer demand for an ineffective health remedy (multivitamin supplements). Design: We adopted a 2 (contingency information: no/yes) × 2 (fear appeal: no/yes) factorial design, with willingness-to-pay as the dependent variable. The contingency information specified, in table format, the number of people reporting a benefit vs. no benefit from both multivitamins and placebo, plus a causal explanation for lack of efficacy over placebo. The fear appeal involved a summary of clinical-trial results that indicated multivitamins can cause health harms. The control condition received only irrelevant information. Main outcome measure: Experimental auctions measured people’s willingness-to-pay for multivitamins. Experiment 1 (N = 260) elicited hypothetical willingness-to-pay online. Experiment 2 (N = 207) elicited incentivised willingness-to-pay in the laboratory. Results: Compared to a control group, we found independent effects of contingency information (-22%) and the fear appeal (-32%) on willingness-to-pay. The combination of both interventions had the greatest impact (-50%) on willingness-to-pay. Conclusion: We found evidence that consumer choices are influenced by both perceptions of efficacy and risk. The combination of both elements can provide additive effects that appear superior to either approach alone.

KW - complementary and alternative medicine (CAM)

KW - fear appeal

KW - health communication

KW - health psychology

KW - risk estimation

U2 - 10.1080/08870446.2020.1774056

DO - 10.1080/08870446.2020.1774056

M3 - Journal article

VL - 36

SP - 593

EP - 611

JO - Psychol. Health

JF - Psychol. Health

SN - 0887-0446

IS - 5

ER -