Examining Responsiveness to an Incentive-Based Mobile Health App: Longitudinal Observational Study

BackgroundThe Carrot Rewards app was developed as part of a public-private partnership to reward Canadians with loyalty points for downloading the app, referring friends, completing educational health quizzes, and health-related behaviors with long-term objectives of increasi...

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Main Authors: Brower, Jacob, LaBarge, Monica C, White, Lauren, Mitchell, Marc S
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2020-08-01
Series:Journal of Medical Internet Research
Online Access:https://www.jmir.org/2020/8/e16797
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spelling doaj-a643207f5bd449f28740c8559a3872312021-04-02T21:36:39ZengJMIR PublicationsJournal of Medical Internet Research1438-88712020-08-01228e1679710.2196/16797Examining Responsiveness to an Incentive-Based Mobile Health App: Longitudinal Observational StudyBrower, JacobLaBarge, Monica CWhite, LaurenMitchell, Marc S BackgroundThe Carrot Rewards app was developed as part of a public-private partnership to reward Canadians with loyalty points for downloading the app, referring friends, completing educational health quizzes, and health-related behaviors with long-term objectives of increasing health knowledge and encouraging healthy behaviors. During the first 3 months after program rollout in British Columbia, a number of program design elements were adjusted, creating observed differences between groups of users with respect to the potential impact of program features on user engagement levels. ObjectiveThis study examines the impact of reducing reward size over time and explored the influence of other program features such as quiz timing, health intervention content, and type of reward program on user engagement with a mobile health (mHealth) app. MethodsParticipants in this longitudinal, nonexperimental observational study included British Columbia citizens who downloaded the app between March and July 2016. A regression methodology was used to examine the impact of changes to several program design features on quiz offer acceptance and engagement with this mHealth app. ResultsOur results, based on the longitudinal app use of 54,917 users (mean age 35, SD 13.2 years; 65.03% [35,647/54,917] female), indicated that the key drivers of the likelihood of continued user engagement, in order of greatest to least impact, were (1) type of rewards earned by users (eg, movies [+355%; P<.001], air travel [+210%; P<.001], and grocery [+140%; P<.001] relative to gas), (2) time delay between early offers (−64%; P<.001), (3) the content of the health intervention (eg, healthy eating [−10%; P<.001] vs exercise [+20%, P<.001] relative to health risk assessments), and (4) changes in the number of points offered. Our results demonstrate that reducing the number of points associated with a particular quiz by 10% only led to a 1% decrease in the likelihood of offer response (P<.001) and that each of the other design features had larger impacts on participant retention than did changes in the number of points. ConclusionsThe results of this study demonstrate that this program, built around the principles of behavioral economics in the form of the ongoing awarding of a small number of reward points instantly following the completion of health interventions, was able to drive significantly higher engagement levels than those demonstrated in previous literature exploring the intersection of mHealth apps and financial incentives. Previous studies have demonstrated the presence of incentive matters to user engagement; however, our results indicate that the number of points offered for these reward point–based health interventions is less important than other program design features such as the type of reward points being offered, the timing of intervention and reward offers, and the content of the health interventions in driving continued engagement by users.https://www.jmir.org/2020/8/e16797
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brower, Jacob
LaBarge, Monica C
White, Lauren
Mitchell, Marc S
spellingShingle Brower, Jacob
LaBarge, Monica C
White, Lauren
Mitchell, Marc S
Examining Responsiveness to an Incentive-Based Mobile Health App: Longitudinal Observational Study
Journal of Medical Internet Research
author_facet Brower, Jacob
LaBarge, Monica C
White, Lauren
Mitchell, Marc S
author_sort Brower, Jacob
title Examining Responsiveness to an Incentive-Based Mobile Health App: Longitudinal Observational Study
title_short Examining Responsiveness to an Incentive-Based Mobile Health App: Longitudinal Observational Study
title_full Examining Responsiveness to an Incentive-Based Mobile Health App: Longitudinal Observational Study
title_fullStr Examining Responsiveness to an Incentive-Based Mobile Health App: Longitudinal Observational Study
title_full_unstemmed Examining Responsiveness to an Incentive-Based Mobile Health App: Longitudinal Observational Study
title_sort examining responsiveness to an incentive-based mobile health app: longitudinal observational study
publisher JMIR Publications
series Journal of Medical Internet Research
issn 1438-8871
publishDate 2020-08-01
description BackgroundThe Carrot Rewards app was developed as part of a public-private partnership to reward Canadians with loyalty points for downloading the app, referring friends, completing educational health quizzes, and health-related behaviors with long-term objectives of increasing health knowledge and encouraging healthy behaviors. During the first 3 months after program rollout in British Columbia, a number of program design elements were adjusted, creating observed differences between groups of users with respect to the potential impact of program features on user engagement levels. ObjectiveThis study examines the impact of reducing reward size over time and explored the influence of other program features such as quiz timing, health intervention content, and type of reward program on user engagement with a mobile health (mHealth) app. MethodsParticipants in this longitudinal, nonexperimental observational study included British Columbia citizens who downloaded the app between March and July 2016. A regression methodology was used to examine the impact of changes to several program design features on quiz offer acceptance and engagement with this mHealth app. ResultsOur results, based on the longitudinal app use of 54,917 users (mean age 35, SD 13.2 years; 65.03% [35,647/54,917] female), indicated that the key drivers of the likelihood of continued user engagement, in order of greatest to least impact, were (1) type of rewards earned by users (eg, movies [+355%; P<.001], air travel [+210%; P<.001], and grocery [+140%; P<.001] relative to gas), (2) time delay between early offers (−64%; P<.001), (3) the content of the health intervention (eg, healthy eating [−10%; P<.001] vs exercise [+20%, P<.001] relative to health risk assessments), and (4) changes in the number of points offered. Our results demonstrate that reducing the number of points associated with a particular quiz by 10% only led to a 1% decrease in the likelihood of offer response (P<.001) and that each of the other design features had larger impacts on participant retention than did changes in the number of points. ConclusionsThe results of this study demonstrate that this program, built around the principles of behavioral economics in the form of the ongoing awarding of a small number of reward points instantly following the completion of health interventions, was able to drive significantly higher engagement levels than those demonstrated in previous literature exploring the intersection of mHealth apps and financial incentives. Previous studies have demonstrated the presence of incentive matters to user engagement; however, our results indicate that the number of points offered for these reward point–based health interventions is less important than other program design features such as the type of reward points being offered, the timing of intervention and reward offers, and the content of the health interventions in driving continued engagement by users.
url https://www.jmir.org/2020/8/e16797
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