Nudging intensive care unit personnel towards sustainable behaviour

Author:

Van Der Zee Sophie12ORCID,Verhoog Tamarah2,Post Theo1,Garcia‐Gomez Pilar2ORCID,van Raaij Erik M.34,Diehl Jan‐Carel5ORCID,Hunfeld Nicole6

Affiliation:

1. Erasmus School of Law Erasmus University Rotterdam Rotterdam The Netherlands

2. Erasmus School of Economics Erasmus University Rotterdam Rotterdam The Netherlands

3. Rotterdam School of Management Erasmus University Rotterdam Rotterdam The Netherlands

4. Erasmus School of Health Policy and Management Erasmus University Rotterdam Rotterdam The Netherlands

5. Faculty of Industrial Design Engineering Delft University of Technology Delft The Netherlands

6. Department of Intensive Care and Pharmacy Erasmus University Medical Center Rotterdam The Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe health care sector is among the most carbon‐intensive sectors, contributing to societal problems like climate change. Previous research demonstrated that especially the use of personal protective equipment (e.g., aprons) in critical care contributes to this problem. To reduce personal protective equipment waste, new sustainable policies are needed.AimsPolicies are only effective if people comply. Our aim is to examine whether compliance with sustainable policies in critical care can be increased through behavioural influencing. Specifically, we examined the effectiveness of two sets of nudges (i.e., a Prime + Visual prompt nudge and a Social norm nudge) on decreasing apron usage in an intensive care unit (ICU).Study DesignWe conducted a field experiment with a pre‐ and post‐intervention measurement. Upon the introduction of the new sustainable policy, apron usage data were collected for 9 days before (132 observations) and 9 days after (114 observations) the nudge interventions were implemented.ResultsNeither the Prime + Visual prompt nudge, nor the Social norm nudge decreased apron usage.ConclusionsWhile previous studies have found that primes, visual nudges and social norm nudges can increase sustainable behaviour, we did not find evidence for this in our ICU field experiment. Future research is needed to determine whether this null finding reflects reality, or whether it was due to methodological decisions and limitations of the presented experiment.Relevance to Clinical PracticeThe presented study highlights the importance of studying behavioural interventions that were previously proven successful in the lab and in other field contexts, in the complex setting of critical care. Results previously found in other contexts may not generalize directly to a critical care context. The unique characteristics of the critical care context also pose methodological challenges that may have affected the outcomes of this experiment.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference65 articles.

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2. Gupta Strategists.Een stuur voor de transitie naar duurzame gezondheidszorg. Kwantificering van de CO2‐uitstoot en maatregelen voor verduurzaming. 2019. Accesssed August 28 2023.https://strategists.nl/storage/files/1920_Studie_Duurzame_Gezondheidszorg_DIGITAL_DEF.pdf

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