Patient Doctor Lies
Sponsored by University of Utah
About This Study
Accurate patient information disclosure is critical to provide optimal treatment. Methods that can detect and then increase the truthfulness of information are relatively unknown. To investigate the impact of communication about privacy, benefits, and risk on patient truthfulness, the investigators test two new methods to detect patient truthfulness and demonstrate the effects of privacy notices (e.g. HIPPA statements). Participants include a national online sample randomly assigned to one of six treatment statements that might be typically given before health information was requested. The assigned treatments include one or mix of the following: privacy notice, statement of the benefits of accurate disclosure, and statement of the risks of inaccurate disclosure and control of no statement before being asked typical health questions. The investigators propose that based on elaboration likelihood model, statements reminding participants of their privacy will increase lying. The investigators hypothesis the use of a new biometric mouse movement lie detection method and answer adjustment can measure patient lies. The investigators hypothesis that reminders of the risk of not telling the truth will reduce lying due to risk aversion. Lastly the investigators hypothesis that statements of benefits of answering truthfully will increase truthfulness.
Conditions Studied
Interventions
- •Benefit statement
- •Risk Statement
- •Privacy Statement
- •Benefit + Privacy
- •Risk + Privacy
Eligibility
View full eligibility criteria
Inclusion Criteria: * Adults * Individuals 18-80 years * English speaking * Live in the United States Exclusion Criteria: * Participants that do not complete the survey