MedPath

Understanding Food Choices

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Diet Quality
Interventions
Behavioral: Explicit Tax
Behavioral: Ordering
Behavioral: Food Labels (with the summary of healthiness of shopping baskets & targets)
Behavioral: Within-Group Substitution
Registration Number
NCT04632212
Lead Sponsor
Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School
Brief Summary

This study aims to use the Multiphase Optimization Strategy (MOST) to build and optimize a multi-component intervention that improves diet quality. The investigators will evaluate the effects of evidence-based public health interventions on consumers' diet quality via a web-based grocery store "NUSMart" and then identify a multi-component intervention that includes only those interventions meaningfully affecting diet quality.

Detailed Description

The important role that diet plays in health and disease is well established. Excessive intake of energy, saturated fat and sodium increase the risk of heart disease, diabetes and certain cancers. As a result, interventions aimed at encouraging healthier food consumption have been pursued by many countries. These can be broadly grouped into the following categories: price manipulations, food labeling, and behavioral nudges.

No study has previously assessed the potentially interactive effects of a multi-component intervention that incorporates the strongest features of each intervention component while discarding those that do not meaningfully contribute to healthier consumption. That is the goal of this effort.

To this end, the investigators chose a full-factorial design because this experimental design allows us to estimate not only the independent (main) effects of the interventions but also their interaction effects. The full-factorial design includes all possible combinations of the interventions' status. Because the investigators have four interventions, each of which has two levels (intervention On or Off), there are 16 (i.e. 2\^4) experimental conditions/arms in total. The four interventions for this study are outlined below:

- Explicit Tax: To impose an explicit tax on food and beverage items that are eligible for red stop-sign (explained in b.) as less healthy foods.

Foods and Beverages: The investigators will impose a 20% tax on sales price of the food items.

* Food Labels (with the summary of healthiness of shopping baskets \& targets): To provide the green circle 'healthy choice' food label to items with Nutri-Score "A" and "B", the amber circle 'in between healthy and unhealthy choice' food label to items with Nutri-Score "C", and the red stop-sign 'Unhealthy choice' food label to items with Nutri-Score "D" and "E". In the presence of food labels, before shopping, subjects will watch a video briefly explaining the food labels on the store and be provided a live visual indicator of the healthiness of shoppers' current basket (called "My Cart Summary") with the recommended healthy baskets goals (i.e., Green logo products ≥ 60% and Red logo products ≤ 15% of the weighted number of servings of products.). My Cart Summary will be displayed as a pie chart with the proportion of servings in their current shopping baskets, according to the three food labels. This way, as shoppers add to their basket while browsing the store, they will have visual feedback on how their latest addition contributes to their total basket healthiness.

* Ordering: To order food items by Nutri-Score such that healthier items are shown upfront on NUSMart.

* Within Group Substitution: At the checkout, to provide consumers with an opportunity to replace their original items with an item chosen from two or four recommended substitutes that are healthier within their corresponding food categories based on the similarities of price, ingredients, flavor, and other characteristics.

Participants will be randomly assigned to one of the 16 arms and instructed to perform a one-time hypothetical grocery shopping on NUSMart.

The investigators will collect participants' demographic and health characteristics as well as hunger at the time of the survey and their self-control in the baseline survey. The collected data will be used to precisely estimate the causal effect of the interventions and address their underlying mechanism to change consumers' food choices.

Our hypotheses about the effects of the interventions on diet quality, measured by the weighted average Nutri-Score (primary) of finalized shopping baskets, are as follows:

1. There will be significant and positive main effects of each of the interventions.

2. There will be significant and positive interaction effects on diet quality of: Explicit tax \& food labels, Food labels \& ordering.

We will also run models both with and without including covariates that include demographic variables (e.g., age, minority status, income, BMI, sex, and household size) and measurements of self-control, hunger, and health-status. To test the moderating effects of hunger, self-control, health-status, and education level, we will include interaction terms between the intervention arms and these variables.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
756
Inclusion Criteria
  • Singapore Resident
  • Age 21 and above
  • Must be the primary weekly grocery shopper in their household
Exclusion Criteria
  • Non-Singapore resident
  • Less than 21 years old
  • Non-primary grocery shopper in their household

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
FACTORIAL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
3Within-Group SubstitutionTax (ON) Food Labels (ON) Ordering (OFF) Substitution (ON)
3Explicit TaxTax (ON) Food Labels (ON) Ordering (OFF) Substitution (ON)
4Food Labels (with the summary of healthiness of shopping baskets & targets)Tax (ON) Food Labels (ON) Ordering (OFF) Substitution (OFF)
14OrderingTax (OFF) Food Labels (OFF) Ordering (ON) Substitution (OFF)
15Within-Group SubstitutionTax (OFF) Food Labels (OFF) Ordering (OFF) Substitution (ON)
1Explicit TaxTax (ON) Food Labels (ON) Ordering (ON) Substitution (ON)
1OrderingTax (ON) Food Labels (ON) Ordering (ON) Substitution (ON)
1Within-Group SubstitutionTax (ON) Food Labels (ON) Ordering (ON) Substitution (ON)
4Explicit TaxTax (ON) Food Labels (ON) Ordering (OFF) Substitution (OFF)
6Explicit TaxTax (ON) Food Labels (OFF) Ordering (ON) Substitution (OFF)
7Explicit TaxTax (ON) Food Labels (OFF) Ordering (OFF) Substitution (ON)
7Within-Group SubstitutionTax (ON) Food Labels (OFF) Ordering (OFF) Substitution (ON)
1Food Labels (with the summary of healthiness of shopping baskets & targets)Tax (ON) Food Labels (ON) Ordering (ON) Substitution (ON)
2Explicit TaxTax (ON) Food Labels (ON) Ordering (ON) Substitution (OFF)
2OrderingTax (ON) Food Labels (ON) Ordering (ON) Substitution (OFF)
5Explicit TaxTax (ON) Food Labels (OFF) Ordering (ON) Substitution (ON)
5Within-Group SubstitutionTax (ON) Food Labels (OFF) Ordering (ON) Substitution (ON)
8Explicit TaxTax (ON) Food Labels (OFF) Ordering (OFF) Substitution (OFF)
10OrderingTax (OFF) Food Labels (ON) Ordering (ON) Substitution (OFF)
11Food Labels (with the summary of healthiness of shopping baskets & targets)Tax (OFF) Food Labels (ON) Ordering (OFF) Substitution (ON)
2Food Labels (with the summary of healthiness of shopping baskets & targets)Tax (ON) Food Labels (ON) Ordering (ON) Substitution (OFF)
3Food Labels (with the summary of healthiness of shopping baskets & targets)Tax (ON) Food Labels (ON) Ordering (OFF) Substitution (ON)
6OrderingTax (ON) Food Labels (OFF) Ordering (ON) Substitution (OFF)
9Food Labels (with the summary of healthiness of shopping baskets & targets)Tax (OFF) Food Labels (ON) Ordering (ON) Substitution (ON)
9OrderingTax (OFF) Food Labels (ON) Ordering (ON) Substitution (ON)
10Food Labels (with the summary of healthiness of shopping baskets & targets)Tax (OFF) Food Labels (ON) Ordering (ON) Substitution (OFF)
11Within-Group SubstitutionTax (OFF) Food Labels (ON) Ordering (OFF) Substitution (ON)
5OrderingTax (ON) Food Labels (OFF) Ordering (ON) Substitution (ON)
9Within-Group SubstitutionTax (OFF) Food Labels (ON) Ordering (ON) Substitution (ON)
13OrderingTax (OFF) Food Labels (OFF) Ordering (ON) Substitution (ON)
12Food Labels (with the summary of healthiness of shopping baskets & targets)Tax (OFF) Food Labels (ON) Ordering (OFF) Substitution (OFF)
13Within-Group SubstitutionTax (OFF) Food Labels (OFF) Ordering (ON) Substitution (ON)
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Diet QualityAt the end of data collection, up to 8 weeks

Diet quality measured by the weighted average of all purchased products' Nutri-Score for the shopping trip. Nutri-Score is an individual dietary index based on the British Food Standard Agency Nutrient Profiling System.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Proportion of productsAt the end of data collection, up to 8 weeks

The proportion of products eligible for the green circle label and the red stop-sign label respectively, of the purchased products.

Average nutrients per servingAt the end of data collection, up to 8 weeks

Average calories, sodium, sugar, fat, and saturated fat per serving, which will be calculated based on all purchased products' total nutritional value.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Duke-NUS Medical School

🇸🇬

Singapore, Singapore

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