
Please note: This note was prepared by the J-PAL Health Sector in 2020 to provide recommendations for responding to the COVID-19 pandemic. It is not an exhaustive review of all the rigorous evidence on the discussed topics.
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As of May 2020, the novel coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) has spread to every region of the world, infecting millions of people and killing hundreds of thousands.1 With no cure yet identified, prevention is essential. The World Health Organization (WHO), national health agencies, and other experts have issued guidance on best practices, from practicing social distancing to frequent handwashing.
Following this guidance is not necessarily easy for everyone. For instance, individuals living in overcrowded conditions may not be able to practice social distancing, those whose livelihoods depend on frequent and close interactions with others may not be able to afford it, and those without access to clean water and soap would not be able to wash their hands frequently. Other individuals may simply not be aware of the guidelines, may not understand the specific steps to follow, or they may not be convinced of the need to practice these behaviors.
In instances where lack of clear messaging or inadequate understanding of the need to practice recommended behaviors are the primary barriers to guideline adherence, evidence from rigorous research can help to inform government actions. This note provides some general lessons on increasing uptake of healthy behaviors and on improving the delivery of health products and services. It does not tailor recommendations to specific contexts or provide details on implementation. However, given the importance of tailoring interventions to suit local contexts, we encourage policymakers to reach out to Anupama Dathan, J-PAL Health Sector Manager, for follow-up conversations on incorporating the evidence into policy decisions.
Many governments are advising residents to stay home, practice social distancing, regularly wash hands, and to take various other actions to prevent COVID-19. Many individuals will find it impossible to regularly practice the recommended behaviors due to financial insecurity, lack of access to clean water or soap, and various other constraints. For those who are physically able to take up these behaviors, what information is shared and through whom may influence adherence. It will also be important to avoid spreading misinformation when doing so.
Simply urging people to change behavior usually does not work. This insight comes from a number of studies from around the world, focused on a number of health topics.2 For instance, providing health insurance consumers in the United States with specific and personalized price information on the cost of prescriptions increased the likelihood of consumers switching plans and decreased annual consumer costs (Kling et al. 2012).
While top-down messaging that is framed in a specific and actionable way can change behavior, leveraging the community is also important for sustained behavior change.3 For example, a study in Nepal found that high school girls whose friends received a menstrual cup were more likely to adopt them as well (Thornton and Oster, 2008). Two experiments from India demonstrated that highly central individuals in a community may be particularly effective at spreading important information and that community members are able to identify such individuals quite reliably (Banerjee et al. 2019). In rural Peru, a large-scale handwashing intervention in 2010 involving a mass media campaign (radio, posters, and promotional events) alongside a community-based training improved knowledge and modified behaviors, while mass media alone had no impact. The campaign led to more households correctly identifying that water and soap was the best way of washing hands and increased the number of people washing their hands before eating (Galiani et al 2015; Galiani et al. 2012).
Television, radio, or other entertainment platforms can be used to change attitudes and behaviors by embedding educational messages in a bigger storyline.4 In Nigeria, for example, the edutainment television series MTV Shuga improved knowledge and attitudes towards HIV and risky sexual behavior and increased the likelihood of getting tested for HIV (Banerjee et al. 2019). Effects were stronger for viewers who reported being more involved with the story or identified with the characters.
In Indonesia, a study leveraging Twitter found that celebrity endorsement significantly increased the likelihood that a tweet promoting immunization was liked or retweeted relative to similar tweets without celebrity endorsement. The effect was particularly large when celebrities were seen as speaking in their own voice, rather than citing external sources. By contrast, explicitly citing sources in the tweets actually reduced diffusion (Alatas et al 2020).
Evidence on information provision demonstrates that receiving messages from those with whom one feels a connection—community members, peers, characters on TV shows and other forms of entertainment, celebrities, etc.—can be important for uptake of recommended behaviors. Messaging this information with specific and actionable steps can be additionally impactful. It is also important to avoid spreading misinformation through these platforms.
Since the COVID-19 pandemic is a health crisis accompanied by a severe economic one, cash transfers can provide income support and potentially increase uptake of healthy behaviors.
A review of the literature shows that offering conditional cash transfers (CCTs) that require households to meet certain conditions on healthy behavior generally increases adoption of targeted behaviors.5 In some cases, making households aware of the importance of such behaviors and implying that the transfer should be used for them, without strong enforcement of conditions, also contributed to the increase in health service utilization.
Providing cash with no conditions, or unconditional cash transfers (UCTs), increases spending on household priorities and often improves overall household well-being. However, improved health outcomes are difficult to detect unless the cash transfer is very large.
The practices described above can help motivate individuals and households to take up healthy behaviors. As governments and other actors think through distribution of essential commodities once they are developed, research yields insights on how to deliver them to maximize uptake.
A study in Sierra Leone found during the 2014-16 Ebola crisis that community monitoring of government-run health clinics and status awards for clinic staff (both implemented roughly two years prior to the Ebola health crisis) improved the community's perception of health care quality, utilization of health services, and Ebola-related health outcomes. During the crisis, the interventions increased Ebola testing rates and reduced mortality among patients, driven by improvements in the community monitoring intervention (Christensen et al. 2020). A study from the United States similarly showed the importance of trust in the health care system: black men, typically more mistrustful of the health care system, were more likely to trust providers of the same race. Seeing doctors they trusted increased their preventive health care utilization rate, including receiving the seasonal flu vaccine (Alsan et al. 2019).
Uptake of preventive health products, such as vaccines, is highly sensitive to price. A large body of evidence shows that take-up reduces dramatically even with small price increases, and especially so for products with large social externalities.6 For example, when a program in Kenya moved from free provision of deworming tablets to charging US$0.30 per child, take-up fell from 75 percent to 18 percent (Kremer and Miguel 2007). Furthermore, preventive products distributed for free have generally been put to good use.
This note highlights some general lessons on how policymakers may be able to increase adherence to COVID-19 guidelines and improve the delivery of key health products once they are readily available. It does not intend to provide details on implementation. Policymakers interested in learning more about the evidence presented here are encouraged to reach out to Anupama Dathan, J-PAL Health Sector Manager, for follow-up conversations on incorporating the evidence into policy decisions.
For more information, see this webinar by J-PAL Health Sector co-chairs, Karen Macours and Pascaline Dupas, on "Insights from behavioral economics for adherence to COVID-19 recommendations and improving service delivery during the current crisis."
1. World Health Organization. 2020. “Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19): Situation Report 107.”
2. Studies from J-PAL affiliates on specific and actionable information provision include, Galiani et al. 2015; Bennear et al. 2013; Dupas 2011; Dupas et al. 2018; Maughan-Brown et al. 2015; Meredith et al. 2013; Kling et al. 2012
3. Studies from J-PAL affiliates on peer effects and social networks for health include Dupas 2014; Oster and Thornton 2012; Kremer and Miguel 2007; Goldberg et al. 2019; Banerjee et al. 2019
4. Studies from J-PAL affiliates on edutainment include Banerjee et al. 2019; Banerjee et al. 2016; Green et al. 2018
5. J-PAL's policy insight on the topic is available here.
6. J-PAL’s policy insight on the topic is available here.