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Dr Deepak N Patel
Behavioural Economics, Health and Vitality
Agenda
The Health Landscape 01
The Role of Behavioural
Economics in Health 03
The Vitality
Programme 04
Determinants of Health
Behaviour 02
Vitality Research 05
Top 10 Causes of Death
1900 vs. 2010
Chronic Diseases Hypertension
High cholesterol
Diabetes
Lung diseases
Cancers
SA’s Quadruple Burden of Disease
HIV and AIDS
Accidents and Violence
Diseases of Poverty Gastro
Pneumonia
Malnutrition
Alcohol and Substance Abuse
Sexual Behaviour
Lifestyle behaviour
High Prevalence Of Poor Lifestyle Factors And Associated Chronic Diseases
60%
4main risk factors
4main NCDs Lead to
Responsible for Of all deaths worldwide
5
Agenda
The Health Landscape 01
The Role of Behavioural
Economics in Health 03
The Vitality
Programme 04
Determinants of Health
Behaviour 02
Vitality Research 05
7
BEHAVIOUR
Psychological
Biological
Environmental (socio-economic)
Biopsychosocial Model
Adapted from Social Cognitive Theory – Albert Bandura
HEALTH OR DISEASE
8
The Evolution of Physical Inactivity
and Sedentary Behaviour
10
Humans are endurance athletes
Use of External Sources of Energy at the
Expense of Internal Energy
11
The History of Food
14
Fast Food World
Portion Distortion
1
6
Standard Economics and Behavioural economics
Standard Economic Model
•Humans make perfectly rational decisions if given
sufficient information and if the price or incentives are right.
•Decisions are intended to maximise their utility
(satisfaction).
• Time-consistent preferences
•Humans exercise maximum self-control
1
7
Standard Economics and Behavioural economics
Behavioural Economics
• Bounded rationality
• Poor self-control
• Time inconsistent preferences
• Prone to biases
The Architecture of Cognition: Two Systems
Intuition / Want
• Fast
• Automatic
• Effortless
• Emotional
• Governed by habit
Reasoning / Should
Slow
Controlled
Deliberative
Value-based
18
Present-biased preferences.
Time preferences -
humans display a tendency
to delay the implementation
of decisions that are in their
long term interests for
decisions that provide
immediate gratification –
19
Other People’s Behaviour Matters
people do many things by observing others and copying; people are
encouraged to continue to do things when they feel other people
approve of their behaviour. Individuals are more likely to model
behavior observed in people they identify with.
20
21
The Power of Media and Advertising
Habits are important
22
People tend to be overconfident and
overestimate their abilities and health status
23
24
Over-weighing of small probabilities and
under-weighing of high probabilities
S M O K I N G A L C O H O L D I A B E T E S A I R C R A F T S
Status-quo bias
individuals tend to maintain a current state even
when the adoption of alternate options is likely to
lead to better outcomes.
25
26
People often know what is in their long-term interest
but have difficulty in implementing decisions in the
present to enhance those interests.
Behavioral economics and change
Changes in environment to ‘nudge’ people in
beneficial directions
Does not infringe on the right of individuals to make
the ‘wrong’ choices
27
Government Policy
Macro-environment
Choice Architecture
28
Agenda
The Health Landscape 01
The Role of Behavioural Economics in
Health 03
The Vitality Programme 04
Determinants of Health Behaviour 02
Vitality Research 05
Vitality provides a behavioural solution to the under- consumption of wellness
The Vitality wellness program uses behavioural
economic principles to drive behaviour change in key
areas of health risk:
01 02 Vitality provides access to healthy partners Vitality incentivises behaviour change
Vitality provides access to partners that lowers the
barriers to healthy choices, and incentivises ongoing
engagement:
Physical inactivity
Poor nutrition
Smoking Preventive screenings
HealthyFood
Physical activity platform
Pre 2002 2003 2004
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
Lifestyle partners
Lifestyle
rewards Retail
rewards
• Gym visits
• Smoking
• Fitness
assessments
• Vitality checks
• Online
Nutrition
Centre
• Online
Stress
Centre
• Nutrition
assessment
at dietician
network
• Enhanced
clinical focus
of Vitality
points
• Dental Check-ups
• GP Wellness
assessment
• Diamond Status
• Personal Health
Review
• HealthyFood
purchases
• Personal Pathways
• Online Fitness
Assessment
• Healthy
Company
Index
Research collaborations
2013 2014
Wellness
partners
Fast Miles
+
Nutrition
Travel
rewards
KeyFIT
Targeted access
Physical activity and
preventative care
• Additional
Devices
• Personalised
Programmes
Retail and lifestyle
rewards
Enhanced
travel rewards
Re
wa
rds
cha
ssis
C
lin
ica
l fo
un
da
tio
n
2015 2016
• Expanded
personal health
programmes
• VitalityBaby
• Vitality Global
Network
• Shared Value
Insurance
Active Rewards
Apple Watch
Enhanced
HealthyLiving
Enhanced Activity
benefits
Healthy Kids
Membership
1.9 million 1 million 1.25 million 1.5 million
2017
• Enhanced Vitality
Check
• Enhanced risk
segmentation
• Closer alignment of
points to health
outcomes
• Targeted
programmes for at-
risk members
Shoe Booster
Points to Miles
Enhanced travel rewards
The evolution of Vitality
32
Vitality recently launched Active Rewards
Download
and activate Get active
Achieve
fitness goal Get rewarded
Get Apple Watch Get active Get rewarded
Agenda
The Health Landscape 01
The Role of Behavioural Economics in
Health 03
The Vitality Programme 04
Determinants of Health Behaviour 02
Vitality Research 05
Vitality’s research foundations
Incentive study HealthyFood
benefit study
Behavioural
economics
Discovery
Healthy Company
Index
Kevin
Volpp
George
Loewenstein
To examine the role of various incentives to increase physical activity
NIH Grant for HealthyFood benefit evaluation – paper to be published by the American Journal of
Health Behavior
Roland Sturm
Vitality Drive; Social media and behaviour change
Dan Ariely Janet Schwartz
To explore burden of disease and wellness behaviour & activity in the workplace
Engaged members experienced lower costs,
shorter stays in hospital and fewer admissions
*Patients with at least one admission event
Admit rate (number of
admissions)*
Length of stay in hospital (days) Cost per patient
Increase in fitness engagement over time
21,1
24,8 27,0
31,1 31,8
1 2 3 4 5
Year
% o
f m
em
be
rs u
sin
g
the
gy
m b
en
efi
t
Increasing engagement over time
37
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Year 1 Year 5
% o
f m
em
bers
High engaged
Medium engaged
Low engaged
Not engaged
49%
13%
26%
12%
30%
22%
28%
20%
Engagement levels amongst longitudinal study test participants over the investigation period
90 92 94 96 98 100
Outcomes associated with transitions
between engagement levels
Year 1 Hospital cost per member, Year 4 to 5 Year 3
Inactive
Inactive
Active
Less
active
Active Active
More
Active
6%
8%
9%
Benchmark
Benchmark
Relationship between increasing activity
and the odds of hospitalisation
Number of additional gym visits per week from Year 1 to Year 3
Od
ds
rati
o f
or
ho
spit
alis
atio
n in
Yea
rs 4
to
5
0,80
0,85
0,90
0,95
1,00
0,5 1,0 1,5 2,0
13%
10%
7%
3%
Impact of the Vitality HealthyFood benefit
Increase in ratio of healthy food spend after activating HealthyFood benefit
Activation of benefit
Months before/after enrolment
Expenditure ratio
-11 -8 -5 1 -2 4 7 10
0.2
0.25
0.15
9.3%
6.0%
Have not activated the
benefit
Activated the benefit at
15% cashback
Activated the benefit at
25% cashback
Healthier by Precommitment - Duke Collaboration
Aim Study the effect of pre-committing to buying healthy food on food
purchasing behaviour
Participants who accepted pre-commited to increasing the percentage
of HealthyFood™ items in their baskets by 5% for six DiscoveryCard
statement cycles.
If they don’t achieve their commitment, they forfeit their HealthyFood
cash back
42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42 42
Study Results: Healthy %
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
Cycle 0 Cycle 1 Cycle 2 Cycle 3 Cycle 4 Cycle 5 Cycle 6
Non-commit Control Precommit
43
START
1. Control
2. A diabetes-specific message
3. A message with a recommendation of HF from another Vitality member with diabetes, and
4. A message with a recommendation of HF from a physician with diabetes expertise.
5. Enhanced active choice – “Yes! I want to active the HealthyFood benefit and get up to 25% cash back on the healthy food I buy” or “No, I’d prefer not to activate and continue paying full price for my healthy food purchases.”
44
45
0,9%
7,6%
12,5%
10,0%
6,9%
0,0%
2,0%
4,0%
6,0%
8,0%
10,0%
12,0%
14,0%
16,0%
18,0%
20,0%
Control Diabetes-specific Diabetes-specific +Enhanced Active
Choice
MemberRecommendation
ProviderRecommendation
% Enrolled in HealthyFood at end of intervention period
Vitality – a Model of Shared Value
2018 DISCOVERY
VITALITY
Thank You