| Literature DB >> 24176084 |
Joel Gittelsohn1, Seung Hee Lee-Kwan, Benjamin Batorsky.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Food purchased from prepared-food sources has become a major part of the American diet and is linked to increased rates of chronic disease. Many interventions targeting prepared-food sources have been initiated with the goal of promoting healthful options. The objective of this study was to provide a systematic review of interventions in prepared-food sources in community settings.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24176084 PMCID: PMC3816610 DOI: 10.5888/pcd10.130073
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prev Chronic Dis ISSN: 1545-1151 Impact factor: 2.830
Key Components of Interventions on Community-based Prepared-Food Sources: Interventions Conducted in Specialty Restaurantsa
| Characteristic | Baltimore Healthy Carryouts ( | Good for You ( | Steps to a Healthier Salinas ( | Horgen and Brownell 2002 ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Peer-reviewed articles; conference presentation; website | Peer-reviewed article; e-mail correspondence | Peer-reviewed articles; interview; e-mail correspondence; intervention materials | Peer-reviewed article; interview |
|
| Baltimore; African American; low-income; urban | Minnesota; Target store customers | Salinas, California; low-income; mostly Mexican American | New Haven, Connecticut; delicatessen customers; mostly white, upper-middle class |
|
| Social cognitive theory; Social marketing | Not specified | Socioecological model; asset-based community development | Matching model; health belief model |
|
| Awareness; availability; affordability; consumption | Awareness; consumption | Awareness; consumption; availability | Awareness; consumption; affordability |
|
| Carryout restaurants serving mainly deep-fried foods | Cafeteria in large general merchandise/department store | Mexican-style restaurants | Delicatessen |
|
| Low-fat, low-cholesterol entrées, sides, and beverages | 15 Low-fat items on menu | Healthier preparations for dishes; replacement of lard with vegetable oil for cooking | Low-fat meals and sides |
|
| ||||
|
| Menu board; menu labeling; point-of-purchase posters | Menu labeling; point-of-purchase materials (table tents, tray liners) | Point-of-purchase materials (logo on menu and signage) | Price reduction messages; point-of purchase materials (signs, posters) |
|
| Fresh fruits, yogurts, healthful sides, and grilled chicken sandwich | None | Healthful preparation strategies; fresh fruit juices | None |
|
| Reduced-price combination meals | None | Coupons (10% discount) | 20%–30% price reduction of low-fat items |
|
| None | None | None | None |
|
| None | None | Healthy Nutrition Tool kit; give-aways | None |
|
| Semi-structured interview with customers (N = 50) and owners (N = 12); focus groups, conjoint analysis (N = 50) | Customer survey of interest in buying lower-fat foods at Target Food Avenue | Surveys of local taquerias; work with owners to identify intervention strategies | Informal discussions with restaurant managers and staff |
Includes restaurants, such as carryouts, taquerias, and delicatessen cafés, that focused on specialty foods; it excludes chain fast-food restaurants.
Key Components of Interventions on Community-based Prepared-Food Sources: Interventions Conducted in Chain Restaurants
| Characteristic | Coeur en Santé St-Henri ( | TrEAT Yourself Well ( | Tandon et al 2011 ( |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Peer-reviewed article | Peer-reviewed article; e-mail correspondence | Peer-reviewed article; e-mail correspondence |
|
| Montreal; restaurant customers; low-income | San Diego area; restaurant customers; mostly white | Seattle and San Diego; children aged 6–11 years and parents |
|
| Social learning theory | Theory of reasoned action; social marketing | None specified |
|
| Awareness; consumption | Awareness; consumption | Awareness; consumption |
|
| Fast-food restaurant and family-style restaurant | 4 chain restaurants | Chain restaurants |
|
| Low-fat, high-fiber items on menus | Low-fat menu items containing fruits and vegetables | Chain restaurant foods |
|
| |||
|
| Menu labeling | Point-of-purchase materials (table tents, posters) | Menu labeling |
|
| Recipe modification to increase fiber or decrease fat | None | None |
|
| None | Discount cards | None |
|
| Media (newspaper, telephone, leaflets) | Community events and food tasting; media (television, magazines, newspaper) | None |
|
| None | Wait-staff incentives | None |
|
| Community informants identify popular restaurants; dietitian review of menu options via interviews with kitchen staff supervisor and suppliers | None | None |
Key Components of Interventions on Community-based Prepared-Food Sources: Interventions Conducted in Small Local Restaurantsa
| Characteristic | Shape Up Somerville ( | Smart Menu Program ( | The Healthy Options Program ( |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Peer-reviewed articles; website | Peer-reviewed articles; e-mail correspondence | Peer-reviewed article; website; e-mail correspondence |
|
| Somerville, Massachusetts; restaurant customers; students in 1st–3rd grade | Tacoma-Pierce County, Washington; restaurant customers; mostly white | Rural Iowa; mostly white |
|
| Community-based participatory research | Diffusion of innovations | Social cognitive theory |
|
| Awareness; availability | Awareness; consumption | Awareness; consumption |
|
| Various participating restaurants | Various participating locally owned restaurants | Various locally owned restaurants |
|
| Half-size portions; low-fat milk or water | Meal and dessert items | Low-fat dressings, milk, meat, sides, breakfast items, desserts, whole-wheat bread |
|
| |||
|
| Menu labeling; point-of-purchase materials (logo and signs, menu inserts) | Menu labeling | Point-of-purchase materials (table placard, poster) |
|
| Half-sized portions of entrées; fruit and vegetable side dishes; low-fat milk or water | Encouragement of addition of healthful items, preparations, smaller portion sizes | None |
|
| None | None | None |
|
| Improved walkability and environmental policies; community advocates established; farmers market program; newspaper ads | Media (newsletters, newspapers, websites) | Media (newspaper) |
|
| None | Free menu analysis | None |
|
| Meetings, focus groups, and interviews with owners/managers; advisory council; approval criteria were refined with feedbacks from restaurant owners and managers; unable to complete 3 focus groups with restaurants | Menu labeling literature review; consulted food industry representative and health advisory group; no formal formative research phase. | Pilot survey to indicate customer preferences; presented to owners |
Includes small, locally owned “mom-and-pop” establishments that include but are not limited to take-out and sit-down restaurants and restaurants that focused on specialty foods; it excludes chain restaurants.
Key Components of Interventions on Community-based Prepared-Food Sources: Interventions Conducted in Mixed Types of Restaurantsa
| Characteristic | Healthy Howard Initiative ( | Healthy Restaurant Program ( | Winners Circle Healthy Dining Program ( |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Interview; website; printed materials; e-mail correspondence | Peer-reviewed article; research report; interview | Peer-reviewed article; conference presentation; website; e-mail correspondence |
|
| Howard County, Maryland; restaurant customers | Seoul, South Korea; restaurant customers | 65 North Carolina counties; mixed race/ethnicity |
|
| Community-based environmental change initiative | Community capacity analysis | Social marketing; community-based environmental-change initiative |
|
| Awareness; consumption | Awareness; consumption | Awareness; consumption |
|
| Various participating restaurants | Various participating restaurants | Various participating restaurants |
|
| Healthful entrées that meet nutritional criteria | Healthful menu items that meet nutritional criteria | Meals, side items, snacks and beverages good for “heart health” |
|
| |||
|
| Menu labeling; point-of-purchase materials (window decal and certificate, nutrition sheets) | Menu labeling; point-of-purchase materials (photos, menu boards, posters, logo on restaurant) | Point-of-purchase materials (logo on menu, promoted items) |
|
| Trans fat-free; healthful menu options | Foods that meet nutritional standards | None |
|
| Discounts (planned, not yet implemented) | None | None |
|
| Media (newspaper, magazine, websites); community events | Media (newspaper, website); community events | Media (billboards, television) |
|
| Comply with the “Clean Indoor Air Act”; pass food inspections; allergen labeling on menu | None | Nutritional information in booklets or brochures in some locations |
|
| None | Survey of customers and restaurant workers for information on how to design intervention; focus groups with restaurant workers; in-depth interviews with consumers | Pilot in 2 North Carolina counties; intercept interviews |
Includes restaurants (both local and chain) that did not share characteristics with other intervention restaurants or whose characteristics were not well defined.
Evaluation Methods Used by Interventions on Prepared-Food Sources, by Type of Intervention: Interventions Conducted in Specialty Restaurantsa
| Characteristic | Baltimore Healthy Carryouts ( | Good for You ( | Steps to a Healthier Salinas ( | Horgen and Brownell 2002 ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Experimental design; pre–post assessment (n = 8) | Nonexperimental; pre–post sales analysis, broken down by quarter (n = 7) | Nonexperimental; no pre–post assessment; intervention trial, voluntary participation; no comparison group (n = 16) | Nonexperimental; pre–post assessment (n = 1) |
|
| Informal observation; staff reports; interviews with carryout owners or staff | Launched simultaneously in all Target Food Avenue restaurants; not assessed at individual store level | Assessments, discussion with health educators | Informal visits, daily check-in |
|
| Direct observation | None | Surveys with store owners; informal observation | Informal visits, daily check-in |
|
| Sales | Sales | None | Sales |
|
| Purchasing; awareness; self-reported body mass index | None | Modified Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System | Behavior |
Includes restaurants, such as carryouts, taquerias, and delicatessen cafés, that focused on specialty foods; it excludes chain fast-food restaurants.
Feasibility assessment measures include acceptability, operability, and perceived sustainability.
Process evaluation measures include dose, reach, and fidelity, which indicate how well the program was implemented according to plan.
Consumer impact measures included psychosocial, behavioral, and health outcomes.
Evaluation Methods Used by Interventions on Prepared-Food Sources, by Type of Intervention: Interventions Conducted in Chain Restaurants
| Characteristic | Coeur en Santé St-Henri ( | TrEAT Yourself Well ( | Tandon et al 2011 ( |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Nonexperimental; no pre–post assessment (n = 2) | Quasi-experimental; no pre–post assessment; comparison regions (n = 4) | Pre–post assessment; comparison counties |
|
| None | None | None specified |
|
| None | None | None specified |
|
| None | None | None |
|
| Purchasing; attitudes | Awareness; attitudes | Awareness; behavior (calories consumed) |
Feasibility assessment measures include acceptability, operability, and perceived sustainability.
Process evaluation measures include dose, reach, and fidelity, which indicate how well the program was implemented according to plan.
Consumer impact measures included psychosocial, behavioral, and health outcomes.
Evaluation Methods Used by Interventions on Prepared-Food Sources, by Type of Intervention: Interventions Conducted in Small Local Restaurantsa
| Characteristic | Shape Up Somerville ( | Smart Menu Program ( | The Healthy Options Program ( |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Quasi-experimental; nonexperimental for restaurant portion of intervention; intervention trial, voluntary participation (n = 21) | Nonexperimental; pre–post assessment; intervention trial, voluntary participation; no comparison group (n = 6) | Nonexperimental; pre–post assessment (n = 4) |
|
| Environmental change assessment; owners’ compliance and perceived impact | Interviews with restaurant owners or managers | Interviews with owner and staff |
|
| Extensive process evaluation; participation and adherence to intervention elements | Observation of nutrition information being posted | None |
|
| Owner survey (menu changes, sales, nutrition awareness) | Sales | Sales |
|
| None for restaurant intervention; assessment at child and household level (change in body mass index) | Awareness; behavior | Awareness; behavior |
Includes small, locally owned “mom-and-pop” establishments that include but are not limited to take-out and sit-down restaurants and restaurants that focused on specialty foods; it excludes chain restaurants.
Feasibility assessment measures include acceptability, operability, and perceived sustainability.
Process evaluation measures include dose, reach, and fidelity, which indicate how well the program was implemented according to plan.
Consumer impact measures included psychosocial, behavioral, and health outcomes.
Evaluation Methods Used by Interventions on Prepared-Food Sources, by Type of Intervention: Interventions Conducted in Mixed Types of Restaurantsa
| Characteristic | Healthy Howard Initiative ( | Healthy Restaurant Program ( | Winners Circle Healthy Dining Program ( |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Nonexperimental design; intervention trial, voluntary participation; no comparison group | Nonexperimental design; pre–post assessment; intervention trial, voluntary participation; no comparison group | Nonexperimental; intervention trial, voluntary participation; cross-sectional survey of community awareness of program; no comparison group |
|
| Restaurant owner or manager survey; focus group; recipe analysis | Interviews with chefs; survey of restaurant managers or staff | Survey of managers |
|
| Informal observation, telephone communication; annual health inspection; recertification every 2 years | Annual menu analysis; annual observation | Tracked reach and dose using Winner’s Circle team reporting forms; menu review |
|
| Restaurant owner or manager survey (recall of sales) | Restaurant owner survey | None |
|
| Psychosocial, behavioral survey | Awareness; attitudes | Awareness |
Includes restaurants (both local and chain) that did not share characteristics with other intervention restaurants or whose characteristics were not well defined.
Feasibility assessment measures include acceptability, operability, and perceived sustainability.
Process evaluation measures include dose, reach, and fidelity, which indicate how well the program was implemented according to plan.
Consumer impact measures included psychosocial, behavioral, and health outcomes.
Feasibility, Process, and Impact Results of Interventions on Prepared-Food Sources: Interventions Conducted in Specialty Restaurantsa
| Characteristic | Baltimore Healthy Carryouts ( | Good for You ( | Steps to a Healthier Salinas ( | Horgen and Brownell 2002 ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| High acceptability and fidelity for Phase 1 and Phase 3; medium acceptability and operability for Phase 2; high dose received | Not assessed | Medium feasibility; medium reach to owners; moderate to high fidelity in terms of changes to menu items | Assessed but results not reported |
|
| Increase in sales of promoted items | Increase in sales of promoted items | Not assessed | Increase in sales of promoted items, especially with price reductions |
|
| Not assessed | Not assessed | Assessed but results not reported | Assessed but results not reported because of low response rate |
|
| Increased purchasing | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed |
|
| Community members’ positive response toward the intervention | Seasonality of sales of some foods (salad, frozen yogurt) | Mistrust of health educators by restaurant owners | Health messages not very effective |
|
| Low implementation cost | Sales of labeled foods remained high | High sustainability: most signage still displayed 4 years later | Went out of business |
|
| Disseminated citywide as a public market carryout strategy “Get Fresh Public Markets” | Supports effectiveness of menu labeling | Considering permits based on healthful food offerings | Subsidies on healthful foods can increase sales |
Includes restaurants, such as carryouts, taquerias, and delicatessen cafés, that focused on specialty foods; it excludes chain fast-food restaurants.
Feasibility, Process, and Impact Results of Interventions on Prepared-Food Sources: Interventions Conducted in Chain Restaurants
| Characteristic | Coeur en Santé St-Henri ( | TrEAT Yourself Well ( | Tandon et al 2011 ( |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| High acceptability among owners and customers | Not assessed | None |
|
| Not assessed | Not assessed | None |
|
| Awareness of campaign; intentions to eat healthier | High awareness; beliefs about healthful food | High awareness of nutrition information |
|
| Increased purchasing in family-style restaurant compared with fast-food restaurant | Increased purchasing of healthful foods | No difference in mean calories consumed between or within groups |
|
| 25% of customers reported that they eat at the restaurant at least once a week; health and taste top 2 reasons for selecting healthful items | Demographic variables had no effect on awareness | No information |
|
| Permanent implementation of some healthful foods | No information | No information |
|
| Evidence for feasibility of intervention in low-income setting | Moderate support for promotional campaigns as intervention strategy | None |
Feasibility, Process, and Impact Results of Interventions on Prepared-Food Sources: Interventions Conducted in Small Local Restaurantsa
| Characteristic | Shape Up Somerville ( | Smart Menu Program ( | The Healthy Options Program ( |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Low acceptability; medium reach | High acceptability; low feasibility; low reach; low operability | Moderate acceptability of promoted items; high fidelity; high feasibility |
|
| 4/10 Restaurants changed menus; 6/10 reported customers ordering from Shape Up Somerville options; 7/10 believed beneficial to participate; 7/10 were more aware of nutrition; 4/10 thought customers were more aware of nutrition | Fewer average calories, lower levels of fat and sodium per entrée sold | No significant change in ordering |
|
| Not assessed at restaurant level | High level of awareness; no impact on knowledge reported | Moderate awareness |
|
| Not assessed at restaurant level | 20.4% of customers reported ordering lower calories, 16.5% lower fat | 1/3 of customers reported materials influenced ordering |
|
| Body mass index among children reduced by 0.1005 | Higher entrée cost associated with more calories and fat consumed; consumers chose smaller, cheaper entrées | None |
|
| Low-medium: more than 50% of restaurants were noncompliant at follow-up | Medium: resource-intensive intervention. | High: materials stayed in place |
|
| Needed a stronger prepared-food source component | Success for calorie-labeling policy | Possibilities for combination with other intervention strategies |
Includes small, locally owned “mom-and-pop” establishments that include but are not limited to take-out and sit-down restaurants and restaurants that focused on specialty foods; it excludes chain restaurants.
Feasibility, Process, and Impact Results of Interventions on Prepared-Food Sources: Interventions Conducted in Mixed Types of Restaurantsa
| Characteristic | Healthy Howard Initiative ( | Healthy Restaurant Program ( | Winners Circle Healthy Dining Program ( |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Moderate reach (currently on-going) | Increasing reach; improved ratings of participating restaurants | High feasibility; medium-low reach |
|
| Not assessed (surveys not performed) | Increase in sales of promoted items; sodium and fat in foods significantly decreased | Not assessed |
|
| Assessed but not reported | High customer acceptability | Low awareness |
|
| Assessed but not reported | Not assessed | Medium use of label for food choice |
|
| None | None | None |
|
| Low implementation cost | High: 85/96 of restaurants are maintaining program | Low-cost, easily implemented |
|
| Voluntary program | Ordinance for the Healthy Restaurant Program | No links with policy |
Includes restaurants (both local and chain) that did not share characteristics with other intervention restaurants or whose characteristics were not well defined.
| Topic | Reviewer 1 long response | Reviewer 1 short summary response | Reviewer 2 long response | Reviewer 2 short summary response | Adjudication (as it appears in the final table) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Project name | |||||
|
| |||||
| Data sources | |||||
|
| |||||
| Target population (ethnicity, age group, geographic location, etc.) | |||||
|
| |||||
| Model/Theory | |||||
|
| |||||
| Goal or Purpose of the trial (increase availability, increase sales, modify consumer diet, etc.) | |||||
|
| |||||
| Food (foods that were the focus of the intervention) | |||||
|
| |||||
| Intervention strategies: signage | |||||
|
| |||||
| Intervention strategies: availability of healthy foods | |||||
|
| |||||
| Intervention strategies: pricing or cost | |||||
|
| |||||
| Intervention strategies: community components | |||||
|
| |||||
| Intervention strategies: other | |||||
|
| |||||
| Study design | |||||
|
| |||||
| Formative research | |||||
|
| |||||
| Feasibility assessment (acceptability, operability, perceived sustainability) | |||||
|
| |||||
| Process evaluation (how well the program was implemented according to plan) | |||||
|
| |||||
| Prepared-food source impact measures | |||||
|
| |||||
| Consumer impact measures (psychosocial, behavioral, health outcomes) | |||||
|
| |||||
| Feasibility and process results | |||||
|
| |||||
| Prepared-food source impact results | |||||
|
| |||||
| Consumer psychosocial Impact results | |||||
|
| |||||
| Consumer behavioral impact results | |||||
|
| |||||
| Other results | |||||
|
| |||||
| Sustainability | |||||
|
| |||||
| Policy results, implications | |||||