The Open Obesity Journal

2014, 6 : 01-12
Published online 2014 January 24. DOI: 10.2174/1876823720140107001
Publisher ID: TOOBESJ-6-1

Effectiveness of Financial Incentives in a Worksite Diabetes Prevention Program

Pouran D. Faghri and Rui Li
Department of Allied Health Sciences/Health Promotion, University of Connecticut.

ABSTRACT

Purpose:

To evaluate the effect of financial incentive in a diabetes prevention weight loss program at worksites.

Design:

Group-level randomized intervention study.

Setting:

Four long term care facilities, randomly assigned to “incentive-IG” or “non incentive- NIG” groups.

Participants:

Ninety-nine employees, all overweight or obese (BMI= mean 34.8+7.4 kg/m2) and at risk for type 2 diabetes.

Intervention:

A 16 weeks weight loss program (diabetes prevention program) with a 3 month follow up. IG could either choose a "standard incentive" to receive cash award when achieving the projected weight loss or to participate in a "standard plus deposit incentive" to get additional money matched with their deposit for projected weight loss. All of the participants received a one-hour consultation for a healthy weight loss at the beginning.

Measures:

Weight-loss, diabetes risk score (DRS), and cardiovascular risk outcomes. Analyses: Linear and logistic regressions for completed cases with adjustments for clustering effect at group level.

Results:

IG lost on average more pounds (p=0.027), reduced BMI (p=0.04), and reduced in DRS (p=0.011) compared to NIG at week 16. At the 12-week follow-up period, those in IG plus deposit subgroup had twice the odds (OR=2.2, p=0.042) and those in the standard IG had three times the odds of achieving weight loss goals than NIG; those in the IG plus deposit group reduced DRS by 0.4 (p=0.045).

Conclusion:

Monetary incentives appear to be effective in reducing weight and diabetes risk.