Litcius/Paper detail

Increasing Organ Donor Registrations with Behavioral Interventions: A Field Experiment

Nicole Robitaille, Nina Mažar, Claire I. Tsai, Avery Haviv, Elizabeth Hardy

2021Journal of Marketing37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

registrations within explicit consent systems. Some empirical evidence suggests that costly, labor-intensive educational programs and mass-media campaigns might increase registrations; however, they are neither scalable nor economical solutions. To address these limitations, the authors conducted a field experiment (N = 3,330) in Ontario, Canada, testing the effectiveness of behaviorally informed promotion interventions as well as process improvements. They find that intercepting customers with materials targeting information and altruistic motives at the right time, along with streamlining customer service, significantly increased registrations. Specifically, the best-performing intervention, prompting perspective taking through reciprocal altruism ("If you needed a transplant would you have one?"), significantly increased new registration rates from 4.1% in the control condition to 7.4%. The authors followed up with seven posttests (total N = 3,376) to find support for their theoretical predictions and to explore the mechanisms through which the interventions may have operated. This article provides evidence for low-cost, scalable marketing solutions that increase organ donor registrations in a prompted choice context and has important implications for public policy and societal welfare.

Topics & Concepts

Organ donationPsychological interventionContext (archaeology)Altruism (biology)Promotion (chess)Intervention (counseling)WelfareDonationEmpirical researchPsychologyEmpirical evidenceSocial psychologyMarketingPublic relationsBusinessMedicineEconomicsNursingTransplantationPolitical scienceSurgeryLawEconomic growthPoliticsBiologyMarket economyPhilosophyPaleontologyEpistemologyOrgan Donation and TransplantationBlood donation and transfusion practicesPsychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment