Effects of different types of front-of-pack labelling information on the healthiness of food purchases—a randomised controlled trial

© 2017 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. Background: Front-of-pack nutrition labelling may support healthier packaged food purchases. Australia has adopted a novel Health Star Rating (HSR) system, but the legitimacy of this choice is unknown. Objective: To define the effects of diff...

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Main Authors: Neal, B., Crino, M., Dunford, E., Gao, A., Greenland, R., Li, N., Ngai, J., Mhurchu, C., Pettigrew, Simone, Sacks, G., Webster, J., Wu, J.
Format: Journal Article
Published: MDPI Publishing 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/65654
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author Neal, B.
Crino, M.
Dunford, E.
Gao, A.
Greenland, R.
Li, N.
Ngai, J.
Mhurchu, C.
Pettigrew, Simone
Sacks, G.
Webster, J.
Wu, J.
author_facet Neal, B.
Crino, M.
Dunford, E.
Gao, A.
Greenland, R.
Li, N.
Ngai, J.
Mhurchu, C.
Pettigrew, Simone
Sacks, G.
Webster, J.
Wu, J.
author_sort Neal, B.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description © 2017 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. Background: Front-of-pack nutrition labelling may support healthier packaged food purchases. Australia has adopted a novel Health Star Rating (HSR) system, but the legitimacy of this choice is unknown. Objective: To define the effects of different formats of front-of-pack labelling on the healthiness of food purchases and consumer perceptions. Design: Individuals were assigned at random to access one of four different formats of nutrition labelling—HSR, multiple traffic light labels (MTL), daily intake guides (DIG), recommendations/warnings (WARN)—or control (the nutrition information panel, NIP). Participants accessed nutrition information by using a smartphone application to scan the bar-codes of packaged foods, while shopping. The primary outcome was healthiness defined by the mean transformed nutrient profile score of packaged foods that were purchased over four weeks. Results: The 1578 participants, mean age 38 years, 84% female recorded purchases of 148,727 evaluable food items. The mean healthiness of the purchases in the HSR group was non-inferior to MTL, DIG, or WARN (all p < 0.001 at 2% non-inferiority margin). When compared to the NIP control, there was no difference in the mean healthiness of purchases for HSR, MTL, or DIG (all p > 0.07), but WARN resulted in healthier packaged food purchases (mean difference 0.87; 95% confidence interval 0.03 to 1.72; p = 0.04). HSR was perceived by participants as more useful than DIG, and easier to understand than MTL or DIG (all p < 0.05). Participants also reported the HSR to be easier to understand, and the HSR and MTL to be more useful, than NIP (all p < 0.03). Conclusions: These real-world data align with experimental findings and provide support for the policy choice of HSR. Recommendation/warning labels warrant further exploration, as they may be a stronger driver of healthy food purchases.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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publishDate 2017
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-656542021-01-13T03:09:38Z Effects of different types of front-of-pack labelling information on the healthiness of food purchases—a randomised controlled trial Neal, B. Crino, M. Dunford, E. Gao, A. Greenland, R. Li, N. Ngai, J. Mhurchu, C. Pettigrew, Simone Sacks, G. Webster, J. Wu, J. © 2017 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. Background: Front-of-pack nutrition labelling may support healthier packaged food purchases. Australia has adopted a novel Health Star Rating (HSR) system, but the legitimacy of this choice is unknown. Objective: To define the effects of different formats of front-of-pack labelling on the healthiness of food purchases and consumer perceptions. Design: Individuals were assigned at random to access one of four different formats of nutrition labelling—HSR, multiple traffic light labels (MTL), daily intake guides (DIG), recommendations/warnings (WARN)—or control (the nutrition information panel, NIP). Participants accessed nutrition information by using a smartphone application to scan the bar-codes of packaged foods, while shopping. The primary outcome was healthiness defined by the mean transformed nutrient profile score of packaged foods that were purchased over four weeks. Results: The 1578 participants, mean age 38 years, 84% female recorded purchases of 148,727 evaluable food items. The mean healthiness of the purchases in the HSR group was non-inferior to MTL, DIG, or WARN (all p < 0.001 at 2% non-inferiority margin). When compared to the NIP control, there was no difference in the mean healthiness of purchases for HSR, MTL, or DIG (all p > 0.07), but WARN resulted in healthier packaged food purchases (mean difference 0.87; 95% confidence interval 0.03 to 1.72; p = 0.04). HSR was perceived by participants as more useful than DIG, and easier to understand than MTL or DIG (all p < 0.05). Participants also reported the HSR to be easier to understand, and the HSR and MTL to be more useful, than NIP (all p < 0.03). Conclusions: These real-world data align with experimental findings and provide support for the policy choice of HSR. Recommendation/warning labels warrant further exploration, as they may be a stronger driver of healthy food purchases. 2017 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/65654 10.3390/nu9121284 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ MDPI Publishing fulltext
spellingShingle Neal, B.
Crino, M.
Dunford, E.
Gao, A.
Greenland, R.
Li, N.
Ngai, J.
Mhurchu, C.
Pettigrew, Simone
Sacks, G.
Webster, J.
Wu, J.
Effects of different types of front-of-pack labelling information on the healthiness of food purchases—a randomised controlled trial
title Effects of different types of front-of-pack labelling information on the healthiness of food purchases—a randomised controlled trial
title_full Effects of different types of front-of-pack labelling information on the healthiness of food purchases—a randomised controlled trial
title_fullStr Effects of different types of front-of-pack labelling information on the healthiness of food purchases—a randomised controlled trial
title_full_unstemmed Effects of different types of front-of-pack labelling information on the healthiness of food purchases—a randomised controlled trial
title_short Effects of different types of front-of-pack labelling information on the healthiness of food purchases—a randomised controlled trial
title_sort effects of different types of front-of-pack labelling information on the healthiness of food purchases—a randomised controlled trial
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/65654