To read this content please select one of the options below:

Setting goal difficulty in monetary incentives to physicians: evidence from an online health knowledge-sharing platform

Yuanyuan Dang (South China University of Technology, Guangzhou, China)
Shanshan Guo (Shanghai International Studies University, Shanghai, China)
Haochen Song (Harbin Institute of Technology, Harbin, China)
Yi Li (Yinchuan Youlai Internet Hospital Company, Beijing, China)

Information Technology & People

ISSN: 0959-3845

Article publication date: 28 February 2023

Issue publication date: 18 March 2024

474

Abstract

Purpose

Prior studies on the impact of incentives on physicians’ online participation mainly focused on different incentives while ignoring the difficulty of setting monetary incentives efficiently. Based on goal-setting theory, the current research examines the relationship between incentives with goals of varying difficulty and professional health knowledge sharing (PHKS) in online health knowledge-sharing platforms (OHKSPs).

Design/methodology/approach

Four field experiments with different monetary incentives were conducted by one of China’s largest OHKSPs, with whom the researchers cooperated in data collection. Monthly panel data on 10,584 physicians were collected from September 2018 to December 2019. There were 9,376 physicians in the treatment group and 1,208 in the control group. The authors used a difference-in-difference (DID) model to explore the research question based on the same control group and the Chow test with seemingly unrelated estimation (sureg) to compare regression coefficients between four groups. Several robustness checks were performed to validate the main results, including a relative time model, multiple falsification tests and a DID estimation using the propensity score matching method.

Findings

The results show that the monetary incentive significantly positively affected the volume of physicians’ PHKS directly with negative spillover to the duration of physicians’ PHKS. Moreover, the positive effect of incentives with higher difficulty on the volume of physicians’ PHKS was significantly smaller than that of incentives with low difficulty. Finally, professional title had a positive moderating effect on the volume of goal difficulty setting and did not significantly moderate the effect on the duration of physicians’ PHKS.

Research limitations/implications

Some limitations of this study are: firstly, because the field experiments were enterprise benefit oriented, the treatment and control groups were not balanced. Secondly, the experiments for different incentive measures were relatively similar, making it challenging to validate a causal effect. Finally, more consideration should be given to the strategy for setting hierarchical incentives in future research.

Originality/value

The research indicates that monetary incentives have a bilateral effect on PHKS, i.e. a positive direct effect on the volume of physicians’ contributions and a negative spillover effect on the duration of physicians’ PHKS. The professional titles of physicians also moderate such bilateral switches of PHKS. Furthermore, when a physician’s energy is limited, the goal difficulty setting of the incentive mechanism tends to be low. The more difficult the incentives are, the more inefficient the effects on physicians’ PHKS will be.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This research was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (72101090, 72171152, 71801062, 71731006, 71925002), the Special Fund Project for Scientific and Technological Innovation (Soft Science) of Guangdong Province (2022A1515011620, 2022A1515011983), Guangdong Philosophy and Social Sciences (GD21YGL09), the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (2021M701242) and the Innovative Research Team of Shanghai International Studies University (2020114044).

Citation

Dang, Y., Guo, S., Song, H. and Li, Y. (2024), "Setting goal difficulty in monetary incentives to physicians: evidence from an online health knowledge-sharing platform", Information Technology & People, Vol. 37 No. 2, pp. 605-634. https://doi.org/10.1108/ITP-11-2021-0901

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles