RSSMicro.com Search - RSS Feed Search Engine - RSS Feed Directory
Dedicated RSS Feed Search Engine
 Search 2.1 million RSS feeds
The most comprehensive RSS feed search on the web
Top Stories  |  FeedRank Checker

Published

   Last Hour

   Last Day

   Past Week

   Past Month

 Anytime







Featured
RSS Feeds


CNN RSS Feeds

Reuters RSS Feeds

MSNBC RSS Feeds

New York Times RSS Feeds

Washington Post RSS Feeds

CNBC RSS Feeds

ABC News RSS Feeds

Fox News RSS Feeds

Sky News RSS Feeds

Forbes RSS Feeds

CNET RSS Feeds

Unicef RSS Feeds

PBS RSS Feeds

Wall Street Journal RSS Feeds

Financial Times RSS Feeds

Business Week RSS Feeds

Bloomberg RSS Feeds

TheStreet RSS Feeds

ESPN RSS Feeds

   


Calculate your site FeedRank Today

FeedRank - RSSMicro Search

FeedRank, a newly developed algorithm for ranking RSS feeds only on RSSMicro
Click here to learn more




FeedRank: 3/10  3/10  Fair  ---  www.healthpopuli.com
...

 

 
Friday, April 18, 2008 --- 97 days ago
The traditional health behavioralists haven't succeeded too well in changing our un-healthy behaviors. It may take an economist and a lawyer to sort this out. In the new book, Nudge , Richard Thaler (the economist) and Cass Sunstein (the lawyer) present a useful approach to motivating people toward better health behaviors. One of the scenarios that particularly resonated with me was the empirical evidence that, if you put healthy food at the front of the school cafeteria, kids will eat it. Thaler and Sunstein term this moving of the healthy stuff to the front of the line as "choice architecture." Thaler's tried this out in the milieu of 401(k) plans, where employers found that a large number of employees weren't taking advantage of the opportunity to invest in them -- even though the "free money" match by employers "should" have motivated the Rational Economic Man and Woman to invest. That assumption -- that people behave rationally -- is the rub that Thaler and Sunstein turn on its head. They are marketing the idea of "libertarian paternalism." The rationale is, according to Thaler quoted in an interview in the Wall Street Journal , to help people make decisions as if they had, "complete information, unlimited cognitive abilities, and no lack of willpower." This approach could be mighty useful for changing health behaviors. Health Populi's Hot Points: If we as a society v ...




Recent Posts





 Facebook     Del.icio.us     Digg     StumbleUpon     Reddit     Google
Copyright © 2008 RSSMicro.com