Marlene B Schwartz1, David R Just2, Jamie F Chriqui3, Alice S Ammerman4. 1. Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity, University of Connecticut, Hartford, Connecticut, USA. 2. Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA. 3. Institute for Health Research and Policy, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA. 4. Department of Nutrition, Gillings School of Global Public Health, and Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, UNC-Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Appetite regulation is influenced by the environment, and the environment is shaped by food-related policies. This review summarizes the environment and policy research portion of an NIH Workshop (Bethesda, MD, 2015) titled "Self-Regulation of Appetite-It's Complicated." METHODS: In this paper, we begin by making the case for why policy is an important tool in efforts to improve nutrition, and we introduce an ecological framework that illustrates the multiple layers that influence what people eat. We describe the state of the science on how policies influence behavior in several key areas: the federal food programs, schools, child care, food and beverage pricing, marketing to youth, behavioral economics, and changing defaults. Next, we propose novel approaches for multidisciplinary prevention and intervention strategies to promote breastfeeding, and examine interactions between psychology and the environment. RESULTS: Policy and environmental change are the most distal influences on individual-level appetite regulation, yet these strategies can reach many people at once by changing the environment in which food choices are made. We note the need for more research to understand compensatory behavior, reactance, and how to effectively change social norms. CONCLUSIONS: To move forward, we need a more sophisticated understanding of how individual psychological and biological factors interact with the environment and policy influences.
OBJECTIVE: Appetite regulation is influenced by the environment, and the environment is shaped by food-related policies. This review summarizes the environment and policy research portion of an NIH Workshop (Bethesda, MD, 2015) titled "Self-Regulation of Appetite-It's Complicated." METHODS: In this paper, we begin by making the case for why policy is an important tool in efforts to improve nutrition, and we introduce an ecological framework that illustrates the multiple layers that influence what people eat. We describe the state of the science on how policies influence behavior in several key areas: the federal food programs, schools, child care, food and beverage pricing, marketing to youth, behavioral economics, and changing defaults. Next, we propose novel approaches for multidisciplinary prevention and intervention strategies to promote breastfeeding, and examine interactions between psychology and the environment. RESULTS: Policy and environmental change are the most distal influences on individual-level appetite regulation, yet these strategies can reach many people at once by changing the environment in which food choices are made. We note the need for more research to understand compensatory behavior, reactance, and how to effectively change social norms. CONCLUSIONS: To move forward, we need a more sophisticated understanding of how individual psychological and biological factors interact with the environment and policy influences.
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