Could nudges reduce health literacy disparities in CVD prevention? An experiment using alternative messages for CVD risk assessment screening

Abstract

Objective

To explore the effect of SMS nudge messages amongst people with varying health literacy on their intention to get a Heart Health Check.

Methods

A 3 (Initial SMS: scarcity, regret, or control nudge) x 2 (Reminder SMS: social norm or control nudge) factorial design was used in a hypothetical online experiment. 705 participants eligible for Heart Health Checks were recruited. Outcomes included intention to attend a Heart Health Check and psychological responses.

Results

In the control condition, people with lower health literacy had lower behavioural intentions compared to those with higher health literacy (p = .011). Scarcity and regret nudges closed this gap, resulting in similar intention levels for lower and higher health literacy. There was no interactive effect of the reminder nudge and health literacy (p = .724).

Conclusion

Scarcity and regret nudge messages closed the health literacy gap in behavioural intentions compared to a control message, while a reminder nudge had limited additional benefit. Health literacy should be considered in behavioural intervention evaluations to ensure health equity is addressed.

Practice implications

Results informed a national screening program using a universal precautions approach, where messages with higher engagement for lower health literacy groups were used in clinical practice.

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The Heart Health Yarning Tool: co-designing a shared decision-making tool for cardiovascular disease prevention and risk management

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Implementing decision aids for cardiovascular disease prevention: stakeholder interviews and case studies in Australian primary care