Loss Aversion and Health Behaviors: Results from Two Incentivized Economic Experiments

Experimental research in health economics has analyzed the effects of economic preference parameters such as risk attitude and time preference on the probability of adopting risky health behaviors. However, the existing evidence is mixed and previous research often fails to include controls for othe...

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Main Author: Donata Bessey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-08-01
Series:Healthcare
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9032/9/8/1040
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spelling doaj-a0a8043ca1af44f390acf11c2eb7a81a2021-08-26T13:47:55ZengMDPI AGHealthcare2227-90322021-08-0191040104010.3390/healthcare9081040Loss Aversion and Health Behaviors: Results from Two Incentivized Economic ExperimentsDonata Bessey0East Asia International College, Yonsei University, Wonju 26493, KoreaExperimental research in health economics has analyzed the effects of economic preference parameters such as risk attitude and time preference on the probability of adopting risky health behaviors. However, the existing evidence is mixed and previous research often fails to include controls for other determinants of health behaviors such as personality traits. The aim of this research is to analyze the relationships between an incentivized measure of loss aversion and three health behaviors: smoking, binge drinking, and engaging in physical activity. Loss aversion is a preference measure that has been derived from prospect theory as an alternative approach to analyze decision-making under risk, such as the decision to invest in health capital, and has never been used in an analysis of the determinants of health behaviors before. Using two experimental samples of college students in the Republic of Korea and the United States of America, and controlling for Big Five personality traits and a host of individual-level control variables, there are no statistically significant relationships between loss aversion and the three aforementioned health behaviors, but relationships for Big Five conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism. A candidate explanation might be lack of domain independence for loss aversion. Differences between the Korean and the US samples indicate the possibility of intercultural differences.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9032/9/8/1040health behaviorsloss aversionBig Fivepersonality traitscollege students
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Donata Bessey
spellingShingle Donata Bessey
Loss Aversion and Health Behaviors: Results from Two Incentivized Economic Experiments
Healthcare
health behaviors
loss aversion
Big Five
personality traits
college students
author_facet Donata Bessey
author_sort Donata Bessey
title Loss Aversion and Health Behaviors: Results from Two Incentivized Economic Experiments
title_short Loss Aversion and Health Behaviors: Results from Two Incentivized Economic Experiments
title_full Loss Aversion and Health Behaviors: Results from Two Incentivized Economic Experiments
title_fullStr Loss Aversion and Health Behaviors: Results from Two Incentivized Economic Experiments
title_full_unstemmed Loss Aversion and Health Behaviors: Results from Two Incentivized Economic Experiments
title_sort loss aversion and health behaviors: results from two incentivized economic experiments
publisher MDPI AG
series Healthcare
issn 2227-9032
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Experimental research in health economics has analyzed the effects of economic preference parameters such as risk attitude and time preference on the probability of adopting risky health behaviors. However, the existing evidence is mixed and previous research often fails to include controls for other determinants of health behaviors such as personality traits. The aim of this research is to analyze the relationships between an incentivized measure of loss aversion and three health behaviors: smoking, binge drinking, and engaging in physical activity. Loss aversion is a preference measure that has been derived from prospect theory as an alternative approach to analyze decision-making under risk, such as the decision to invest in health capital, and has never been used in an analysis of the determinants of health behaviors before. Using two experimental samples of college students in the Republic of Korea and the United States of America, and controlling for Big Five personality traits and a host of individual-level control variables, there are no statistically significant relationships between loss aversion and the three aforementioned health behaviors, but relationships for Big Five conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism. A candidate explanation might be lack of domain independence for loss aversion. Differences between the Korean and the US samples indicate the possibility of intercultural differences.
topic health behaviors
loss aversion
Big Five
personality traits
college students
url https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9032/9/8/1040
work_keys_str_mv AT donatabessey lossaversionandhealthbehaviorsresultsfromtwoincentivizedeconomicexperiments
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