ISSN 1671-3710
CN 11-4766/R
主办:中国科学院心理研究所
出版:科学出版社

心理科学进展 ›› 2025, Vol. 33 ›› Issue (2): 336-350.doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1042.2025.0336

• 研究前沿 • 上一篇    下一篇

提升癌症筛查率的行为助推干预策略

金乐帆, 张宁   

  1. 浙江大学医学院公共卫生学院和附属第二医院, 杭州 310058
  • 收稿日期:2024-04-11 出版日期:2025-02-15 发布日期:2024-12-06
  • 通讯作者: 张宁, E-mail: zhangning2019@zju.edu.cn
  • 基金资助:
    * 国家自然科学基金(82473741), 浙江大学“百人计划”科研启动经费, 浙江省智能预防医学重点实验室种子基金(2023)

Behavioral nudging intervention strategies to increase cancer screening rates

JIN Lefan, ZHANG Ning   

  1. Department of Social Medicine School of Public Health and Center for Clinical Data Analytics of the Second Affiliated Hospital of School of Medicine, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, China
  • Received:2024-04-11 Online:2025-02-15 Published:2024-12-06

摘要: 癌症发病率的持续上升给国家和社会带来了沉重的疾病负担, 及早参加癌症筛查是实现癌症早诊早治的关键环节。传统的以健康宣教为主的癌症筛查干预策略较少考虑到人们在癌症筛查决策中的“非理性因素”, 因此仍有很多人未能及早参加癌症筛查。行为科学的发展为助推癌症筛查提供了启发。根据助推策略是否涉及反思性思维和面向的对象为划分标准, 可将癌症筛查的助推策略分为通过系统1助推癌症筛查接受者和提供者的干预策略以及通过系统2助推癌症筛查接受者和提供者的干预策略。未来仍需通过真实世界研究深入探索癌症筛查助推干预策略的效果和作用机制, 以开发具有文化适应性的, 整合型、数字化、精准化和智能化的癌症筛查助推干预策略, 助力“健康中国行动(2019~2030年)”之“癌症防治行动”的全面推进。

关键词: 癌症筛查, 癌症预防, 助推, 行为干预, 行为公共健康

Abstract: Increasing incidences of cancer have resulted in a heavy disease burden for the whole country and society, early cancer screening is one of the critical bottlenecks for achieving early diagnosis and treatment of cancer. Traditionally, health education-based cancer screening interventions do not take into account the irrationality in people's decision-making on cancer screening, and as a result, the participation rates in early cancer screening in pretty low. Advances in the behavioral sciences provide insights to nudge cancer screening. Depending on whether the nudge strategy involves reflective thinking and who is being nudged, cancer screening nudging strategies can be categorized into interventions that nudge recipients and providers through System 1 and interventions that nudge recipients and providers through System 2. This categorization not only provides a more comprehensive framework for various cancer screening intervention strategies, but also allows for quick selection of intervention strategies for different recipients. In addition, the framework can also inform the further development and validation of behavioral intervention strategies for nudging cancer screening.
The first type of intervention strategy is nudging cancer screening recipients through System 1 thinking. Focusing primarily on the automatic thinking of recipients, this type of strategy promotes people to uptake cancer screening by activating their instinctive and automated responses or habits. These strategies include setting participation in cancer screening as the default option, increasing screening rates through inducing future-oriented emotional responses, sending notifications in advance or motivating people to participate in cancer screening through choice architecture design (e.g., highlighting the scarcity of screening services, inducing psychological ownership, and the decoy effect).
The second type of intervention strategy is one that nudge cancer screening providers through System 1 thinking. Utilizing providers' automatic thinking, this type of strategy sets default reminders for providers to prescribe cancer screening services through electronic health records whenever patients are eligible, which can effectively address the problem of physicians forgetting to schedule cancer screening appointments for their patients, helping to increase screening appointment rates and, in turn, increasing patients’ participation in screening.
The third type of intervention strategy is one that nudge cancer screening recipients through System 2 thinking. Triggering people's reflective thinking, this type of strategy promotes people to actively think about the benefits of early cancer screening and make their own judgments and choices. These strategies include the use of social norms, framing of screening messages, emphasizing the ethical and social responsibility of early cancer screening, or setting up an active choice architecture for screening participation that triggers the public to think about the pros and cons of screening, as well as using pre-commitment devices to encourage the public to delineate their implementation intentions for early cancer screening, and thereby increase completion rates for early cancer screening.
The last type of intervention strategy is one that nudge cancer screening providers through System 2 thinking. This type of intervention strategy can be achieved by constructing active choice architectures that prompt physicians to reflect on the pros and cons of scheduling cancer screening appointments for their patients, thereby increasing cancer screening appointment rates, or by evaluating and providing feedback on a physician's performance in providing early cancer screening, prompting them to think about their own performance, or even to compare their performances with their colleagues, to further increase the prescription of early cancer screening services for eligible patients, thus improving patients’ participation in early cancer screening.
Complementary to traditional cancer screening strategies such as promoting early cancer screening through providing health education and financial incentives, behavioral science-based cancer screening nudging strategies focus on addressing the irrational factors that preclude people from participation early cancer screening. These nudge strategies are typically low-cost, easy to implement, and scalable. Future studies are needed to explore the effectiveness and mechanisms of nudging interventions to promote early cancer screening. This line of research will have implications for developing culturally appropriate, integrated, digital, precise, and intelligent early cancer screening interventions, and contribute to achieving the goal of cancer prevention and control initiative of the Healthy China Action (2019~2030) plan.

Key words: cancer screening, cancer prevention, nudge, behavioral intervention, behavioral public health