Structured reflection increases intentions to reduce other people’s health risks during COVID-19

People believe they should consider how their behavior might negatively impact other people, Yet their behavior often increases others’ health risks. This creates challenges for managing public health crises like the COVID-19 pandemic. We examined a procedure wherein people reflect on their personal...

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Main Authors: RAMOS, Jairo, GRANT, Marrissa D., DICKERT, Stephan, EOM, Kimin, FLORES, Alex, JIGA-BOY, Gabriela M., KOGUT, Tehila, MAYORGA, Marcus, PEDERSEN, Eric J., PEREIRA, Beatriz, RUBALTELLI, Enrico, DAVID, K Sherman, SLOVIC, Paul, VÄSTJÄLL. Daniel, BOVEN, Leaf Van
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2022
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3672
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/4930/viewcontent/Structured_reflection_increases_intentions_to_reduce_other_people_s_health_risks_during_COVID_19.pdf
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spelling sg-smu-ink.soss_research-49302023-01-10T02:15:19Z Structured reflection increases intentions to reduce other people’s health risks during COVID-19 RAMOS, Jairo GRANT, Marrissa D. DICKERT, Stephan EOM, Kimin FLORES, Alex JIGA-BOY, Gabriela M. KOGUT, Tehila MAYORGA, Marcus PEDERSEN, Eric J. PEREIRA, Beatriz RUBALTELLI, Enrico DAVID, K Sherman SLOVIC, Paul VÄSTJÄLL. Daniel, BOVEN, Leaf Van People believe they should consider how their behavior might negatively impact other people, Yet their behavior often increases others’ health risks. This creates challenges for managing public health crises like the COVID-19 pandemic. We examined a procedure wherein people reflect on their personal criteria regarding how their behavior impacts others’ health risks. We expected structured reflection to increase people's intentions and decisions to reduce others’ health risks. Structured reflection increases attention to others’ health risks and the correspondence between people's personal criteria and behavioral intentions. In four experiments during COVID-19, people (N = 12,995) reported their personal criteria about how much specific attributes, including the impact on others’ health risks, should influence their behavior. Compared with control conditions, people who engaged in structured reflection reported greater intentions to reduce business capacity (experiment 1) and avoid large social gatherings (experiments 2 and 3). They also donated more to provide vaccines to refugees (experiment 4). These effects emerged across seven countries that varied in collectivism and COVID-19 case rates (experiments 1 and 2). Structured reflection was distinct from instructions to carefully deliberate (experiment 3). Structured reflection increased the correlation between personal criteria and behavioral intentions (experiments 1 and 3). And structured reflection increased donations more among people who scored lower in cognitive reflection compared with those who scored higher in cognitive reflection (experiment 4). These findings suggest that structured reflection can effectively increase behaviors to reduce public health risks. 2022-10-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3672 info:doi/10.1093/pnasnexus/pgac218 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/4930/viewcontent/Structured_reflection_increases_intentions_to_reduce_other_people_s_health_risks_during_COVID_19.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School of Social Sciences eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University COVID-19 Decision making Boost Nudge Structured reflection Health Psychology
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic COVID-19
Decision making
Boost
Nudge
Structured reflection
Health Psychology
spellingShingle COVID-19
Decision making
Boost
Nudge
Structured reflection
Health Psychology
RAMOS, Jairo
GRANT, Marrissa D.
DICKERT, Stephan
EOM, Kimin
FLORES, Alex
JIGA-BOY, Gabriela M.
KOGUT, Tehila
MAYORGA, Marcus
PEDERSEN, Eric J.
PEREIRA, Beatriz
RUBALTELLI, Enrico
DAVID, K Sherman
SLOVIC, Paul
VÄSTJÄLL. Daniel,
BOVEN, Leaf Van
Structured reflection increases intentions to reduce other people’s health risks during COVID-19
description People believe they should consider how their behavior might negatively impact other people, Yet their behavior often increases others’ health risks. This creates challenges for managing public health crises like the COVID-19 pandemic. We examined a procedure wherein people reflect on their personal criteria regarding how their behavior impacts others’ health risks. We expected structured reflection to increase people's intentions and decisions to reduce others’ health risks. Structured reflection increases attention to others’ health risks and the correspondence between people's personal criteria and behavioral intentions. In four experiments during COVID-19, people (N = 12,995) reported their personal criteria about how much specific attributes, including the impact on others’ health risks, should influence their behavior. Compared with control conditions, people who engaged in structured reflection reported greater intentions to reduce business capacity (experiment 1) and avoid large social gatherings (experiments 2 and 3). They also donated more to provide vaccines to refugees (experiment 4). These effects emerged across seven countries that varied in collectivism and COVID-19 case rates (experiments 1 and 2). Structured reflection was distinct from instructions to carefully deliberate (experiment 3). Structured reflection increased the correlation between personal criteria and behavioral intentions (experiments 1 and 3). And structured reflection increased donations more among people who scored lower in cognitive reflection compared with those who scored higher in cognitive reflection (experiment 4). These findings suggest that structured reflection can effectively increase behaviors to reduce public health risks.
format text
author RAMOS, Jairo
GRANT, Marrissa D.
DICKERT, Stephan
EOM, Kimin
FLORES, Alex
JIGA-BOY, Gabriela M.
KOGUT, Tehila
MAYORGA, Marcus
PEDERSEN, Eric J.
PEREIRA, Beatriz
RUBALTELLI, Enrico
DAVID, K Sherman
SLOVIC, Paul
VÄSTJÄLL. Daniel,
BOVEN, Leaf Van
author_facet RAMOS, Jairo
GRANT, Marrissa D.
DICKERT, Stephan
EOM, Kimin
FLORES, Alex
JIGA-BOY, Gabriela M.
KOGUT, Tehila
MAYORGA, Marcus
PEDERSEN, Eric J.
PEREIRA, Beatriz
RUBALTELLI, Enrico
DAVID, K Sherman
SLOVIC, Paul
VÄSTJÄLL. Daniel,
BOVEN, Leaf Van
author_sort RAMOS, Jairo
title Structured reflection increases intentions to reduce other people’s health risks during COVID-19
title_short Structured reflection increases intentions to reduce other people’s health risks during COVID-19
title_full Structured reflection increases intentions to reduce other people’s health risks during COVID-19
title_fullStr Structured reflection increases intentions to reduce other people’s health risks during COVID-19
title_full_unstemmed Structured reflection increases intentions to reduce other people’s health risks during COVID-19
title_sort structured reflection increases intentions to reduce other people’s health risks during covid-19
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2022
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3672
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/4930/viewcontent/Structured_reflection_increases_intentions_to_reduce_other_people_s_health_risks_during_COVID_19.pdf
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