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A citywide experiment testing the impact of geographically targeted, high-pay-off vaccine lotteries.

Katherine L MilkmanLinnea GandhiSean F EllisHeather N GraciDena M GrometRayyan S MobarakAlison M ButtenheimAngela L DuckworthDevin PopeAla StanfordRichard ThalerKevin G Volpp
Published in: Nature human behaviour (2022)
Lotteries have been shown to motivate behaviour change in many settings, but their value as a policy tool is relatively untested. We implemented a pre-registered, citywide experiment to test the effects of three high-pay-off, geographically targeted lotteries designed to motivate adult Philadelphians to get their COVID-19 vaccine. In each drawing, the residents of a randomly selected 'treatment' zip code received half the lottery prizes, boosting their chances of winning to 50×-100× those of other Philadelphians. The first treated zip code, which drew considerable media attention, may have experienced a small bump in vaccinations compared with the control zip codes: average weekly vaccinations rose by an estimated 61 per 100,000 people per week (+11%). After pooling the results from all three zip codes treated during our six-week experiment, however, we do not detect evidence of any overall benefits. Furthermore, our 95% confidence interval provides a 9% upper bound on the net benefits of treatment in our study.
Keyphrases
  • coronavirus disease
  • public health
  • cancer therapy
  • health insurance
  • mental health
  • working memory
  • young adults
  • clinical trial