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What Can Children Learn from a Free Trial of Eyeglasses Use? Evidence from a Cluster‑Randomized Controlled Trial in Rural China

Free trial is a widely used business strategy that takes advantage of information asymmetry. However, evidence on what we can learn and how rapidly we can learn from a free trial of health care is limited. This study evaluates the effect of a free trial of eyeglasses on children’s 8 items of percept...

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Autores principales: Shi, Yaojiang, Nie, Wei, Mu, Ming, Song, Shuyi, Peng, Lanxi, Zhang, Lifang, Yang, Jie, Guan, Hongyu, Zhu, Yiqi, Gao, Qiufeng, Nie, Jingchun
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7691910/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33233981
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0046958020968776
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author Shi, Yaojiang
Nie, Wei
Mu, Ming
Song, Shuyi
Peng, Lanxi
Zhang, Lifang
Yang, Jie
Guan, Hongyu
Zhu, Yiqi
Gao, Qiufeng
Nie, Jingchun
author_facet Shi, Yaojiang
Nie, Wei
Mu, Ming
Song, Shuyi
Peng, Lanxi
Zhang, Lifang
Yang, Jie
Guan, Hongyu
Zhu, Yiqi
Gao, Qiufeng
Nie, Jingchun
author_sort Shi, Yaojiang
collection PubMed
description Free trial is a widely used business strategy that takes advantage of information asymmetry. However, evidence on what we can learn and how rapidly we can learn from a free trial of health care is limited. This study evaluates the effect of a free trial of eyeglasses on children’s 8 items of perception related to eyeglasses use. An evaluation was conducted alongside a cluster-randomized controlled trial involved 832 myopic children from northwest rural China. A total of 428 myopic children from 42 schools were randomized to receive free eyeglasses, and 404 myopic children from 42 schools were randomized as control group. We find that the perceived costs and benefits of eyeglasses use and the perceived timing of wearing eyeglasses at the appropriate time can be learned from a free trial of eyeglasses. Compared with the control group in the long run, 5.6 percentage points more children in treatment group agreed that wearing eyeglasses was attractive, 16.5 percentage points more children agreed that wearing eyeglasses is helpful to academic performance, and 7.9 percentage points more children agreed that children with vision problems should wear eyeglasses. Due to the effects of a free product and the time to learning from experience, the magnitude of the impact of a free trial changed over time. We also find that the indirect experience, such as a vision protection course, cannot change children’ perceptions about the cost or benefits of eyeglasses use. The findings imply that children can learn significantly from the experience of a free trial of eyeglasses. A free trial is an effective strategy to solve the information asymmetry problem for health care. The first pair of eyeglasses of children can be one-off subsidized to trigger demand for eyeglasses use.
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spelling pubmed-76919102020-12-04 What Can Children Learn from a Free Trial of Eyeglasses Use? Evidence from a Cluster‑Randomized Controlled Trial in Rural China Shi, Yaojiang Nie, Wei Mu, Ming Song, Shuyi Peng, Lanxi Zhang, Lifang Yang, Jie Guan, Hongyu Zhu, Yiqi Gao, Qiufeng Nie, Jingchun Inquiry The Evolution of the Hospital Market in China Free trial is a widely used business strategy that takes advantage of information asymmetry. However, evidence on what we can learn and how rapidly we can learn from a free trial of health care is limited. This study evaluates the effect of a free trial of eyeglasses on children’s 8 items of perception related to eyeglasses use. An evaluation was conducted alongside a cluster-randomized controlled trial involved 832 myopic children from northwest rural China. A total of 428 myopic children from 42 schools were randomized to receive free eyeglasses, and 404 myopic children from 42 schools were randomized as control group. We find that the perceived costs and benefits of eyeglasses use and the perceived timing of wearing eyeglasses at the appropriate time can be learned from a free trial of eyeglasses. Compared with the control group in the long run, 5.6 percentage points more children in treatment group agreed that wearing eyeglasses was attractive, 16.5 percentage points more children agreed that wearing eyeglasses is helpful to academic performance, and 7.9 percentage points more children agreed that children with vision problems should wear eyeglasses. Due to the effects of a free product and the time to learning from experience, the magnitude of the impact of a free trial changed over time. We also find that the indirect experience, such as a vision protection course, cannot change children’ perceptions about the cost or benefits of eyeglasses use. The findings imply that children can learn significantly from the experience of a free trial of eyeglasses. A free trial is an effective strategy to solve the information asymmetry problem for health care. The first pair of eyeglasses of children can be one-off subsidized to trigger demand for eyeglasses use. SAGE Publications 2020-11-24 /pmc/articles/PMC7691910/ /pubmed/33233981 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0046958020968776 Text en © The Author(s) 2020 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits non-commercial use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access pages (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
spellingShingle The Evolution of the Hospital Market in China
Shi, Yaojiang
Nie, Wei
Mu, Ming
Song, Shuyi
Peng, Lanxi
Zhang, Lifang
Yang, Jie
Guan, Hongyu
Zhu, Yiqi
Gao, Qiufeng
Nie, Jingchun
What Can Children Learn from a Free Trial of Eyeglasses Use? Evidence from a Cluster‑Randomized Controlled Trial in Rural China
title What Can Children Learn from a Free Trial of Eyeglasses Use? Evidence from a Cluster‑Randomized Controlled Trial in Rural China
title_full What Can Children Learn from a Free Trial of Eyeglasses Use? Evidence from a Cluster‑Randomized Controlled Trial in Rural China
title_fullStr What Can Children Learn from a Free Trial of Eyeglasses Use? Evidence from a Cluster‑Randomized Controlled Trial in Rural China
title_full_unstemmed What Can Children Learn from a Free Trial of Eyeglasses Use? Evidence from a Cluster‑Randomized Controlled Trial in Rural China
title_short What Can Children Learn from a Free Trial of Eyeglasses Use? Evidence from a Cluster‑Randomized Controlled Trial in Rural China
title_sort what can children learn from a free trial of eyeglasses use? evidence from a cluster‑randomized controlled trial in rural china
topic The Evolution of the Hospital Market in China
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7691910/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33233981
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0046958020968776
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