David Asch: Why it's so hard to make healthy decisions
David Asch advances individual and population health by improving the way physicians and patients make decisions in health care and in everyday life. Full bio
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the Governor of New Jersey,
passenger seat of this SUV
the Garden State Parkway.
to a New Jersey trauma center
and multiple lacerations.
seven units of blood,
to help him breathe
who used to drive Governor Corzine around
was Governor of New Jersey,
the CEO of Goldman Sachs,
Goldman Sachs public,
of Jon Corzine politically
in a car accident,
that seat belts save lives.
a fundamental weakness
to improving health behavior.
and everything we tell patients
that we behave rationally.
that information in my head,
that seat belts save lives?
just didn't get the memo?
a knowledge deficit,
is a high-resistance pathway.
with information is hard enough.
substantial improvements
in the behavior of health and health care.
with a reflex hammer,
a lot faster and a lot more predictably
behavioral reflexes
to human motivation
don't behave as they should,
was dangerous, they wouldn't smoke."
we're all constantly calculating
of every one of our actions
the perfectly right, rational decision.
payment system for doctors
and deductibles for patients,
in behavioral economics.
that we are irrational.
or to social context.
long-term best interests.
to behavioral economics
that we are irrational;
in highly predictable ways.
of our psychological foibles
strategies to overcome them.
reflexes that get us into trouble
in something called "present bias,"
are much more motivating
far in the future.
and I'm always on a diet --
piece of chocolate cake,
eat that chocolate cake.
on that part of my body -- permanently --
looks so good and delicious,
like to avoid a stroke,
your antihypertensive medications
to reduce that risk,
and taking medications is right now.
prescribed high blood pressure pills
the value of small probabilities.
why state lotteries are so popular,
pennies on the dollar.
may buy lottery tickets --
you might strike it rich ...
to invest your retirement savings.
I am not making this up -- that said,
on people who can't do math."
attention to regret.
this recent lottery,
something like over a billion dollars.
is pooling money to buy lottery tickets,
around the office,
on people who can't do math."
at work the next day.
my colleagues to win.
if I had just taken my 20-dollar bill
I shouldn't participate,
of experiments with patients
these electronic pill bottles
they're taking their medication or not.
their medication the day before.
that says something like,
yesterday, so you don't get it."
that feeling of regret
to take their medications.
of hating regret works.
how people are irrational,
position to help them.
even in men's restrooms.
who don't frequent urinals,
can solve this problem
in the back of the urinal.
that if men can aim,
on the floor in the first place?
to pee on the floor,
were prescribing brand-name drugs
represents a different drug.
they're prescribed as generic medications.
as generics 100 percent of the time.
are prescribed as generics
and all sorts of education sessions,
a little piece of software
to generic medications
was solved overnight,
since this program started,
fundamentally wanted to do all along.
people's notions of loss.
to help people walk more.
at least 7,000 steps,
on their cell phone.
just got told whether they had walked
they walked 7,000 steps.
rather than a gain:
at the beginning of each month
they didn't walk 7,000 steps.
that those two financial incentives
you're $1.40 richer.
would say that they're different,
to avoid a $1.40 loss
to achieve a $1.40 gain.
for every day they walked 7,000 steps
than the control group.
more of the time.
but it makes psychological sense,
to help patients walk more,
when it's paired with psychology.
has its own disadvantages.
involves a daycare program.
is picking up your kids late.
because you don't love them.
because they leave work late.
decided they wanted to stop this problem,
daycare programs in the US do,
a fine for late pickups.
it makes perfect sense.
intrinsic motivation not to be late,
realized their mistake
the financial incentive,
at the high level.
the social contract.
of strong intrinsic motivations.
who already want to do the right thing.
money in health care
influencers of health behavior
what others think of us.
to change our behavior
witnessable to others.
when we're being observed
that don't have sinks in the bathrooms.
the sink is outside
whether you wash your hands or not.
that handwashing is much greater
when we're being observed.
in a Florida hospital.
which is dangerous, of course,
a picture of someone's eyes over the sink.
it was just a photograph.
it was just their eyes looking at you.
what other people think of us
that we're being observed.
what others think of us,
on what we see other people do.
the "Batman" TV series with Adam West.
and Robin did was so cool,
was the coolest thing of all.
were optional accessories in cars.
did something really important.
got in the Batmobile,
put on their seat belts.
put on their seat belts,
my seat belt, too.
when they see how other doctors use them.
are hidden, they're unwitnessed,
when they see what other doctors do.
or to loss aversion.
if we thought that everyone was rational
I am not condemning rationality.
the nonrational parts of our minds
creativity, inspiration
at improving health behavior
parts of our nature
or fighting against them.
is just another tool in our toolbox.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
David Asch - Behavioral economist, health policy expertDavid Asch advances individual and population health by improving the way physicians and patients make decisions in health care and in everyday life.
Why you should listen
David Asch is the executive director of the Penn Medicine Center for Health Care Innovation, which aims to accelerate the transformation of health care for better patient outcomes. He is also a professor at both the Perelman School of Medicine and the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. Asch practices internal medicine at the Philadelphia Veterans Affairs Medical Center, where he created the Center for Health Equity Research and Promotion, a national center that works to support vulnerable populations and reduce health disparities. He is the author of more than 350 published papers.
David Asch | Speaker | TED.com