Surviving Bad News: Health Information Without Treatment Options

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Interdisciplinary Centers, Units and Projects::Penn Population Studies Centers::Population Center Working Papers (PSC/PARC)
Degree type
Discipline
Sociology
Medicine and Health Sciences
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Economics
Mental and Social Health
Subject
Mortality
Health information
Fatalism
Treatment
Testing
HIV/AIDS
Funder
We gratefully acknowledge the generous support for the Malawi Longitudinal Study of Families and Health (MLSFH-MAC) by the Swiss Programme for Research on Global Issues for Development (SNF r4d Grant 400640 160374), the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD, Grant Nos. R01 HD044228, R01 HD053781, R01 HD087391), the National Institute on Aging (NIA, Grant No. R21 AG053763), and the Population Studies Center and Population Aging Research Center at the University of Pennsylvania (funded by NICHD P2C HD044964 and NIA P30 AG12836 respectively). We would like to thank seminar participants at the UCD School of Economics, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Kamuzu University of Health Sciences (KUHeS), Royal Economic Society and Scotland and N.E. conference in applied economics for their comments that greatly improved the quality of this work.
Grant number
Copyright date
2024-01-02
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Related resources
Author
Kampfen, Fabrice
Thornton, Rebecca
Contributor
Abstract

Providing personal health information allows individuals to take action to improve their health. If treatment is not available, however, being informed about having a life-threatening disease could lead to feelings of despair or fatalistic behaviors resulting in negative health outcomes. We document this possibility utilizing an experiment in Malawi that randomized incentives to learn HIV testing results in a context where anti-retroviral treatment (ART) was not yet available. Six years after the experiment, receiving an HIV+ diagnosis reduced survival rates by 23% points and this effect persists after 15 years. We show that HIV+ persons who learned they were HIV+ engaged in more risky health behaviors, have greater anxiety and a higher discount rate. We do not find any effects of receiving an HIV - diagnosis on survival.

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Digital Object Identifier
Series name and number
Population Center Working Paper (PSC/PARC), 2024-102
Publication date
2024-01-10
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Issue number
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Publisher DOI
Journal Issue
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Recommended citation
Ciancio, Alberto, Fabrice Kämpfen, Hans-Peter Kohler, and Rebecca Thornton. 2024. “Surviving Bad News: Health Information without Treatment Options.” University of Pennsylvania Population Center Working Paper (PSC/PARC), 2024-102.
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