Written by Theresa Marteau Reposted from CNN.com
Theresa Marteau is director of the
Behaviour and Health Research Unit at the Institute of Public Health,
University of Cambridge, United Kingdom. Her areas of research include
developing and evaluating interventions aimed at changing behaviors to improve
public health.
Would you be
more likely to take the stairs if the elevator doors were slower to close?
Would you be more likely to eat healthy foods if the unhealthy selections were
harder to reach?
You might --
and you might not even be aware of it.
Humans, as
well as other animals, are motivated to conserve energy and have a built-in
preference for the shortest or easiest way of doing something over a longer or
more difficult way.Our behavior is guided by two systems: a reflective system, in which we act in a conscious way, working toward goals while aware of our motivations and actions; and an automatic system, in which we act without reflection, responding to our surroundings and performing behaviors we have performed countless times before.
Targeting automatic behaviors could be a key way to fight disease.
Worldwide,
more than half of deaths are due to four diseases: cancer, heart disease,
diabetes and chronic respiratory disease.
The main
causes of those are smoking, overeating, excessive alcohol consumption and a
sedentary lifestyle. It's estimated that 75% of diabetes and heart disease
cases and 40% of cancers would be prevented by changing the behaviors that
cause them.Past approaches have focused on persuading people of the risks faced by not changing behavior -- not curbing their drinking, for instance, or increasing their physical activity.
But even
if the risks are personalized, evidence has shown, such information has little
or no impact on behavior.
More
intensive behavioral programs, those aimed at weight loss or stopping smoking,
are more effective. But their effect is still limited, as only a small
proportion of those who might benefit enroll in these programs, and of those
who do, only a minority succeed in changing their behavior.
It's the
highly routine behaviors that prove difficult to change.
We now know
that much of our behavior is not driven by thinking about the consequences of
our actions but rather is automatic, shaped by our environments and performed
often without awareness.
So how to target those automatic behaviors?
There are
two broad groups of interventions that try to do this: those that alter a
person's environment to make healthy behaviors the most likely and those that
change automatic associations to make the healthier products more attractive.
Those
stairs might seem easier if the elevator is slow, for instance. And putting
healthier foods nearer to people in a self-service cafeteria, reducing the
effort needed to reach them, might translate into healthier eating.
Another
example: the recent ban on large sodas served in restaurants in New York.
The other
broad approach is to target automatic processes to alter how a person responds
to their environment.
That might
mean increasing the packaging on healthy items to make them more attractive.
"Teddy bear's soup," for example, might be more attractive to
children than "lentil stew."
It may
also mean removing sports references on some food and drinks and removing
branding from cigarette packages, replacing them with images warning of harm.
But
changing our environments, as well as how we react to them, can be a large step
toward preventing 25% of cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes and respiratory
disease by 2020 -- a World Health Organization goal.
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