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Effect of Front-of-Pack Labels in Ethiopia

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Cardiovascular Diseases
Interventions
Other: Front-of-pack labeling
Registration Number
NCT05549388
Lead Sponsor
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Brief Summary

Ethiopia is experiencing the type of rapid food system transformation that leads to a double burden of malnutrition and increased non-communicable diseases. Front-of-pack labels on packaged foods are an emerging public health strategy with the potential to address non-communicable diseases by discouraging the purchase and consumption of products with high levels of nutrients of public health concern. The aim of this study is to evaluate and compare the effectiveness of front-of-pack labeling systems to reduce the intent to purchase unhealthy foods among adults in Ethiopia. The study will recruit approximately 1200 adults using a street-intercept methodology. Participants will be randomized to 1 of 4 arms to complete a survey in which the presence and type of front-of-pack label differs across survey arms and asked to rate participants' intent to purchase unhealthy packaged foods.

Detailed Description

In 2017, cardiovascular disease was the leading age-standardized cause of death in Ethiopia. The national prevalence of hypertension in Ethiopia in 2015 is estimated to be 16% (Gebreyes et al. 2018). Urban diets are rapidly changing, but not becoming healthier (Wolle et al. 2020). Diet quality remains poor: only 2.4% of the national population meets the WHO recommendation of five servings of fruit and vegetables per day. The mean estimated salt intake of 8.3 g/day exceeds the WHO maximum recommended intake (Challa et al. 2017). Processed foods are penetrating the market at a rapid pace (Melesse et al. 2019; Stuckler et al. 2012). Increasing income has increased demand for convenience foods (Minten et al. 2018). Ethiopia is experiencing the type of rapid food system transformation that leads to a double burden of malnutrition and increased non-communicable diseases (Popkin 2017).

Front-of-pack labels on packaged foods are an emerging public health strategy with the potential to address non-communicable diseases by discouraging the purchase and consumption of products with high levels of nutrients of public health concern (Croker et al. 2020). However, front-of-pack labels have not been tested in the Ethiopian context. Additionally, there are multiple types of front-of-pack labeling systems in use around the world, such as Multiple Traffic Light/Guideline Daily Amounts, the Nutri-Score system, and nutrient-specific warning labels.

Therefore, the study aims to to evaluate and compare the effectiveness of front-of-pack labeling systems to reduce the intent to purchase unhealthy foods among adults in Ethiopia. The study will recruit approximately 1200 adults using a street-intercept methodology. Participants will be randomized to 1 of 4 arms to complete a survey in which the presence and type of front-of-pack label differs across survey arms and asked to rate participants' intent to purchase unhealthy packaged foods.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
1200
Inclusion Criteria
  • Age ≥18 years
  • Purchase foods outside of the household
Exclusion Criteria
  • Age <18 years
  • Do not purchase foods outside of the household
  • Unable to complete the survey protocol

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Nutri-ScoreFront-of-pack labelingIn this arm, participants will view images of packaged food or beverage products which have a Nutriscore front-of-pack label and respond to questions about the products.
Warning LabelFront-of-pack labelingIn this arm, participants will view packaged food or beverage products which have front-of-pack warning labels if the product is high in one or more nutrients of concern and respond to questions about the products.
Multiple Traffic Light (MTL)Front-of-pack labelingIn this arm, participants will view images of packaged food or beverage products which have multiple traffic light labels displayed on the front-of-pack and respond to questions about the products.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Intent to purchase based on single product tasksThe outcome will be assessed during survey administration at a single time point (baseline).

Participants will be shown images of four single products, two of which are high in sodium and two of which are high in sugar. For each product, participants will rate their intent to purchase the product on a likert scale. The investigators will calculate the mean of the responses to questions about the four products.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Label understanding and acceptabilityThe outcome will be assessed during survey administration at a single time point (baseline).

In the warning label, multiple traffic light, and Nutriscore arms, participants will be shown images of the respective labels. They will be asked a series of questions regarding their understanding of the label and its acceptability in Ethiopia and provide responses using a likert scale.

Purchase choice based on product comparison tasksThe outcome will be assessed during survey administration at a single time point (baseline).

The investigators will evaluate responses to three product comparison tasks, each of which will present two packaged food items in the same food category and ask respondents which product they would choose to purchase. Specifically, the investigators will examine the proportion in each arm who report they would avoid purchasing the "less healthy" product.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Street-Intercept Survey

🇪🇹

Addis Ababa, Oromia Region, Ethiopia

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