Accuracy incentives and framing effects to minimize the influence of cognitive bias among advanced cancer patients

Author:

Finkelstein Eric A1ORCID,Cheung Yin Bun1,Schweitzer Maurice E2,Lee Lai Heng3,Kanesvaran Ravindran4,Baid Drishti1

Affiliation:

1. Duke-NUS Medical School, Singapore

2. University of Pennsylvania, USA

3. Singapore General Hospital, Singapore

4. National Cancer Centre Singapore, Singapore

Abstract

Many patients with advanced illness have unrealistic survival expectations, largely due to cognitive biases. Studies suggests that when people are motivated to be accurate, they are less prone to succumb to these biases. Using a randomized survey design, we test whether offering advanced cancer patients ( n = 200) incentives to estimate their prognosis improves accuracy. We also test whether presenting treatment benefits in terms of a loss (mortality) rather than a gain (survival) reduces willingness to take up a hypothetical treatment. Results are not consistent with the proposed hypotheses for either accuracy incentives or framing effects.

Funder

Singapore Millennium Foundation

Lien Centre for Palliative Care

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Applied Psychology

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