| Literature DB >> 27899007 |
F C Hillier-Brown1,2, C D Summerbell1,2, H J Moore1,2, A Routen3, A A Lake2,4, J Adams5, M White5,6, V Araujo-Soares2,6, C Abraham7, A J Adamson2,6,8, T J Brown1,2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Ready-to-eat meals sold by food outlets that are accessible to the general public are an important target for public health intervention. We conducted a systematic review to assess the impact of such interventions.Entities:
Keywords: Diet; food environments; ready-to-eat meals; restaurants; systematic review; takeaways
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27899007 PMCID: PMC5244662 DOI: 10.1111/obr.12479
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Obes Rev ISSN: 1467-7881 Impact factor: 9.213
Adapted typology of study designs and quality
| Study design | Study design quality score |
|---|---|
| Repeat cross‐sectional | Weak |
| Repeat cross‐sectional with control | Moderate |
| Repeat cross‐sectional with cohort subgroup | Moderate |
| Cohort | Moderate |
| Repeat cross‐sectional with control and controlled cohort subgroup | Strong |
| Controlled before–after (same participants) | Strong |
| Controlled trial | Strong |
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta‐Analyses flowchart
Summary of included studies with customer‐level outcomes (n = 23)
| Study ID | Study design | Food outlet type | Nuffield intervention ladder | Intervention function | Policy category | Implementation score | Summary impact (↓↑↔↕) (global quality assessment score) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trans fat law ( | |||||||
| Angell 2012 | Repeat cross‐sectional | 11 fast food chains, New York City, USA | Restrict choice | Environmental restructuring | Environmental/social planning; legislation | 5 | ↑ (moderate) |
| Changing pre‐packed children's meal content ( | |||||||
| Wansink 2014 | Repeat cross‐sectional | McDonald's restaurants (fast food chain), USA | Restrict choice | Environmental restructuring | Environmental/social planning; communication/marketing | 3 | ↑ (weak) |
| Price increases for unhealthier choices ( | |||||||
| Price increases for unhealthier choices only | |||||||
| Shah 2014 | Controlled clinical trial | One moderately priced restaurant, which specialized in ‘small plates’ to share, USA | Guide choice (disincentives) | Coercion | Fiscal | 5 | ↓ (strong) unhealthy items ordered by men and women |
| Price increases for unhealthy choices + signposting | |||||||
| Shah 2014 | Controlled clinical trial | One moderately priced restaurant, which specialized in ‘small plates’ to share, USA | Guide choice (disincentives) | Environmental restructuring; education; coercion | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning; fiscal | 5 | ↑ (strong) decrease in unhealthy items ordered by men and women |
| Incentives (contingent rewards) ( | |||||||
| Reimann 2015 | Cohort | Chain sandwich restaurant, USA | Guide choice (incentives) | Incentives | Unclear (customers offered half portions for same price as full portion, plus a lottery ticket) | 7 | ↑ (moderate) customers choosing half‐sized portions |
| Price reductions for healthier choices ( | |||||||
| Price reduction for healthier choices only | |||||||
| Horgen and Brownell 2002 | Controlled clinical trial | Delicatessen‐style restaurant (cafeteria), USA | Guide choice (incentives) | Incentives | Fiscal | 6 | ↑ (weak) healthy food purchase |
| Price reduction for healthier choices + health promotion | |||||||
| Horgen and Brownell 2002 | Controlled clinical trial | Delicatessen‐style restaurant (cafeteria), USA | Guide choice (incentives) | Environmental restructuring; education; incentives; persuasion; enablement | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning; fiscal | 6 | ↑ (weak) healthy food purchase |
| Signposting ( | |||||||
| Signposting only | |||||||
| Shah 2014 | Controlled clinical trial | One moderately priced restaurant, which specialized in ‘small plates’ to share, USA | Enable choice | Environmental restructuring; education | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning; | 5 | ↕ (strong) decrease in unhealthy items ordered |
| Eldridge 1997 | Repeat cross‐sectional | Food service areas of large discount department store chain, USA | Enable choice | Environmental restructuring; education | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning | 6 | ↕ (weak) sales of ‘healthier’ food items |
| Pandya 2013 | Repeat cross‐sectional | Latino family‐owned restaurants, KS, USA | Enable choice | Environmental restructuring; education | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning | 7 | ↓ (weak) healthy food purchases |
| Signposting + menu changes | |||||||
| Nothwehr 2013 | Repeat cross‐sectional | Non‐chain owner‐operated full menu, sit‐down restaurants with typical Midwestern fare, Iowa, USA | Enable choice | Environmental restructuring; education | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning | 8 | ↓ (weak) healthy food purchases |
| Lee‐Kwan 2013 | Controlled clinical trial | Non‐franchised small local food establishments that sell ready‐to‐eat food and beverages for off‐premise consumption, Baltimore, USA | Enable choice | Environmental restructuring; education; incentives | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning | 8 | ↑ (moderate) healthy food purchases |
| Signposting + health promotion/social marketing campaign | |||||||
| Fitzgerald 2004 | Repeat cross‐sectional | Community restaurants varied from counter service to table service, USA | Enable choice | Environmental restructuring; education; persuasion | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning | 6 | ↓ (weak) sales of ‘heart healthy’ menu items |
| Acharya 2006 | Repeat cross‐sectional with control | Restaurant chains (fine dining and moderately priced, family‐style restaurants) (Mexican, upscale pizza, and 40s‐style diner), CA, USA | Enable choice | Environmental restructuring; education; incentives; persuasion | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning | 6 | ↑ (moderate) healthy food purchases |
| Horgen and Brownell 2002 | Controlled clinical trial | Delicatessen‐style restaurant (cafeteria), USA | Enable choice | Environmental restructuring; education; persuasion; enablement | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning | 6 | ↑ (weak) healthy food purchase |
| Calorie labelling law ( | |||||||
| Calorie labelling law only | |||||||
| Bollinger 2011 | Repeat cross‐sectional with control plus subgroup cohort | Starbucks Cafes, New York City, USA | Provide information | Environmental restructuring; education | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning; legislation | 5 | ↑ (strong) |
| Chen 2015 | Repeat cross‐sectional | Regulated chain or fast food restaurants in King County, USA | Provide information | Environmental restructuring; education | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning; legislation | 5 | ↑ (weak) saw and used calorie information |
| Dumanovsky 2011 | Repeat cross‐sectional | 11 fast‐food chains, New York City, USA | Provide information | Environmental restructuring; education | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning; legislation | 5 | ↓ (moderate) |
| Krieger 2013 | Repeat cross‐sectional, retrospective | Restaurants from 10 chains: Subway, McDonald's, Taco del Mar, Taco Time, Starbuck's, Quizno's, Tully's; Jack in the Box, Burger King, Taco Bell, King County, USA | Provide information | Environmental restructuring; education | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning; legislation | 4 | ↓ (moderate) |
| Namba 2013 | Repeat cross‐sectional with control | Large chain fast food restaurants, USA | Provide information | Environmental restructuring; education | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning; legislation | 3 | ↔ (strong) adults and children |
| Elbel 2009 | Repeat cross‐sectional with control | Chain restaurants with >15 establishments – McDonald's, Burger King, Wendy's, KFC in New York City, USA | Provide information | Environmental restructuring; education | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning; legislation | 4 | ↔ (moderate) adults and children |
| Elbel 2013 | Repeat cross‐sectional (before and after legislation) with control cohort (difference in difference design) | Fast food restaurants (McDonald's and Burger King) in Philadelphia (which implemented calorie labelling policies) and Baltimore (which did not and acted as a matched comparison city), USA | Provide information | Environmental restructuring; education | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning; legislation | 5 | ↔ (moderate) |
| Finkelstein 2011 | Repeat cross‐sectional with control | Mexican fast food restaurant chain – Taco Time Northwest, King County, USA | Provide information | Environmental restructuring; education | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning; legislation | 3 | ↔ (moderate) |
| Tandon 2011 | Controlled before‐and‐after study (same participants) | Chain restaurants, King County, USA | Provide information | Environmental restructuring; education | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning; legislation | 4 | ↔ (weak) children |
| Calorie labelling law + nutritional recommendation information | |||||||
| Downs 2013 | Controlled clinical trial | 2 McDonalds restaurants in New York City, USA | Provide information | Environmental restructuring; education | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning | 4 | ↔ (moderate) |
| Voluntary calorie labelling ( | |||||||
| Pulos and Leng 2010 | Repeat cross‐sectional | Full‐service locally owned (non‐chain) restaurants; ‘casual, midrange’, USA | Provide information | Environmental restructuring; education | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning | 6 | ↑ (weak) energy, fat and sodium levels of foods purchased |
| Personalized receipts ( | |||||||
| Bedard and Kuhn 2013 | Repeat cross‐sectional with control | Burgerville restaurants (fast‐food chain), California, USA | Provide information | Environmental restructuring; education; persuasion | Communication/marketing | 4 | ↔ (weak) |
Implementation score was determined using a checklist for obesity‐related interventions 25 adapted from workplace interventions 26.
Energy purchased unless otherwise stated; key: effective (↑), equally effective as a comparison group (↔), effectiveness mixed by outcome or gender (↕), or not effective (↓).
Dumanovsky 2011 and Angell 2012 used the same data set.
Krieger 2013 used the same data set as Saelens 2012 (food‐outlet‐level outcomes, Table 2b).
Summary of included studies with food‐outlet‐level outcomes (n = 7)
| Study ID | Study design | Food outlet type | Nuffield intervention ladder | Intervention function | Policy category | Implementation score | Summary impact (↓↑↔↕) (global quality assessment score) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Award schemes ( | |||||||
| Gase 2015 | Cohort | Licensed retail restaurants, Los Angeles County, USA | Restrict choice | Restriction; environmental restructuring | Regulation; environmental/social planning | 6 | ↑ (weak) reduced‐sized portions available and ‘healthier’ children's meals |
| Bagwell 2014 | Cohort | Small independent catering outlets, London, UK | Restrict choice | Restriction; environmental restructuring; education | Communication/marketing; regulation; environmental/social planning | 2 | ↑ (weak) ‘healthy’ criteria met by businesses (including catering practices, ‘healthy’ options, health promotion) |
| Signposting ( | |||||||
| Signposting + health promotion/social marketing campaign | |||||||
| Hanni 2009 | Cohort | Taquerias – privately owned, fast‐food‐style Mexican restaurants, USA | Enable choice | Environmental restructuring; education; incentives; persuasion; enablement; training; modelling | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning; guidelines | 9 | ↑ (weak) promoting ‘healthier’ food items |
| Telemarketing of healthy food choices ( | |||||||
| Wiggers 2001 | Repeat cross‐sectional plus subgroup cohort | Licensed hotels, clubs and nightclubs, New South Wales, Australia | Enable choice | Education | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning; service provision | 6 | ↑ (weak) serving healthier food options |
| Licata 2002 | Repeat cross‐sectional plus subgroup cohort | Restaurants and cafés, New South Wales, Australia | Enable choice | Education | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning; service provision | 6 | ↓ (weak) nutrition‐related health promotion practices |
| Calorie labelling law ( | |||||||
| Calorie labelling law only | |||||||
| Bruemmer 2012 | Cohort | Chain restaurants with >4 establishments (sit‐down and fast food). Burgers (e.g. McDonalds, Burger King), pizza (e.g. Pizza Hut, Dominos), sandwich/sub (e.g. Subway, Blimpie) or Tex‐Mex (e.g., Taco Time, Taco del Mar), King County, USA | Provide information | Environmental restructuring; education | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning; legislation | 3 | ↑ (weak) energy content of main meals |
| Saelens 2012 | Controlled before‐and‐after study (retrospective) | Fast food chain restaurants, King County, USA | Provide information | Environmental restructuring; education | Communication/marketing; environmental/social planning; legislation | 4 | ↔ (strong) ‘healthfulness’ of adult and children's menus |
Implementation score was determined using a checklist for obesity‐related interventions 25 adapted from workplace interventions 26. Key: effective (↑); equally effective as the comparison group (↔); effectiveness mixed by outcome or gender (↕); or not effective (↓)
Licata 2002 and Wiggers 2001 used the same data pool split by different settings.
Saelens 2012 used the same data set as Krieger 2013 (customer‐level outcomes, Table 2a)
Figure 2Intervention impact summary by Nuffield intervention ladder category and number of intervention functions for customer‐level outcomes (A) and outlet level outcomes (B)
| Intervention category and description of interventions identified by review | Nuffield intervention ladder definition |
|---|---|
|
| Restrict choice |
|
| Restrict choice |
|
| Restrict choice (variable depending on scheme, but those included in this review were all categorized as restrict choice) |
|
| Guide choice (disincentives) |
|
| Guide choice (incentives) |
|
| Guide choice (incentives) |
|
| Enable choice |
|
| Enable choice |
|
| Provide information |
|
| Provide information |
|
| Provide information |
Definition from the Nuffield ladder 18 starting with the most intrusive; eliminate choice, restrict choice, guide choice (disincentives), guide choice (incentives), guide choice (default policy), enable choice, provide information, do nothing.