| Literature DB >> 27965800 |
Peter Scarborough1, Charo Hodgkins2, Monique M Raats2, Richard A Harrington1, Gill Cowburn1, Moira Dean3, Aiden Doherty1, Charlie Foster1, Edmund Juszczak4, Anne Matthews1, Anja Mizdrak1, Cliona Ni Mhurchu5, Richard Shepherd2, Lada Tiomotijevic2, Naomi Winstone2, Mike Rayner1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Traffic light labelling of foods-a system that incorporates a colour-coded assessment of the level of total fat, saturated fat, sugar and salt on the front of packaged foods-has been recommended by the UK Government and is currently in use or being phased in by many UK manufacturers and retailers. This paper describes a protocol for a pilot randomised controlled trial of an intervention designed to increase the use of traffic light labelling during real-life food purchase decisions. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Food; Nutrition; Nutrition labelling; Traffic light labelling; Trial
Year: 2015 PMID: 27965800 PMCID: PMC5153808 DOI: 10.1186/s40814-015-0015-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pilot Feasibility Stud ISSN: 2055-5784
Fig. 1Example of front-of-pack (FOP) labelling that is being phased in by the participating supermarket chain. Source: participating supermarket website. Accessed October 2013
Distribution of traffic light colours on 373 own-brand ready meals and pizzas from the participating supermarket
| Number (%) of foods with red, amber or green lights | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total fat | Saturated fat | Total sugar | Salt | |
| Red | 88 (23.4) | 173 (46.4) | 24 (6.4) | 50 (13.4) |
| Amber | 198 (53.1) | 81 (21.7) | 28 (7.5) | 278 (74.5) |
| Green | 87 (23.3) | 119 (31.9) | 321 (86.1) | 45 (12.1) |
Fig. 2Flow chart of study design
Timetable of data collection
| −T1 | T0 | T1 | T2 | Post-study | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline data | Recruitment | Intervention | Wash out | ||
| (26 weeks) | (4 weeks) | (6 weeks) | (12 weeks) | ||
| Data collection | |||||
| Electronic sales data | X | X | X | ||
| Psychosocial questionnaires | X | X | X | ||
| Process evaluation: semi-structured interviews | X | ||||
| Process evaluation: web analytics | X | X | X |
Intervention components
| Behaviour change techniques | Behavioural mechanisms impacted | Intervention components |
|---|---|---|
| Provide information on consequences of behaviour to the individual | Mechanisms affecting belief formation/Cognitive mechanisms | The risks of eating a diet high in fat, saturated fat, salt sugar and the prominence of these nutrients in ready meals are pizzas are reported (passive)a. |
| ● Attentions bias | Personalised feedback on the traffic light profile of the 6 months of ready meals and pizzas purchased by the participant in − T1 study period are delivered. Participants will be presented with an infographic summarising the 6 months of data and will be able to interrogate the previous data in simple tables, with comparisons made to other available products (interactive). | |
| ● Optimistic bias | ||
| Provide instruction (how to perform the behaviour) | Mechanisms of intention formation | Information about the traffic light label profile of a selection of the ready meals and pizzas that are available from the participating supermarket will be provided in tabular form that the participant can interrogate, designed to highlight the potential for nutritional improvement within the ready meals and pizzas categories (interactive). |
| ● Outcome expectancies | ||
| ● (Action) self-efficacy | ||
| ● Perceived behavioural control | ||
| ● Heuristics | ||
| Goal setting | Planning and goal setting | The following outcome goal is provided: ‘Use traffic light labels when you are shopping in (participating supermarket) for ready meals and pizzas. Compare the traffic light labels between products and try to buy healthier ready meals and pizzas than you would normally. You can do this by: reducing the number of red lights on the label and increasing the number of green lights on the label’ (passive). |
| Modelling the behaviour | Mechanisms of intention formation | A short video showing individuals performing the behaviour in a real store will be provided (passive). |
| ● Outcome expectancies | ||
| ● (Action) self-efficacy | ||
| ● Perceived behavioural control | ||
| Prompt practice | Mechanisms of intention formation | An experiential task will be provided which allows participants to increase their self-efficacy in using traffic light food labels. This will consist of multiple choice tests asking participants to choose healthier versions of ready meals or pizzas with and without traffic light information provided. The intention is to demonstrate that the traffic light information can make these decisions easier to make (interactive). |
| ● (Action) self-efficacy | ||
| ● Perceived behavioural control | ||
| Action planning | Planning and goal setting | Participants will be encouraged to plan when and where they will perform the desired behaviour via the development of intention statement(s) which will be entered into the web application by the participant (interactive). |
| Provide feedback on performance | Adopting and maintaining behaviour | Participant is provided with data on performance against the desired behavioural goal at the end of the trial period. This will be in the form of the infographic used in the ‘personalised feedback’ section, and will be provided with a comparison against the 6 months of shopping conducted in T -1. Participants will be informed in T1 that this feedback will arrive (passive). |
aThis element will be provided to participants in both the intervention and the control arm