| Literature DB >> 28265869 |
Ingrid Steenhuis1, Maartje Poelman2.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The aim of this review is to provide an overview of (1) underlying mechanisms of the effect of portion size on energy intake, (2) external factors explaining the portion size effect and (3) interventions and measurements aimed at food portion size. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Energy intake; Portion size; Portion-size effect; Portion-size interventions
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28265869 PMCID: PMC5359369 DOI: 10.1007/s13679-017-0239-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Obes Rep ISSN: 2162-4968
Recent portion-size interventions
| Step on ladder of intervention | Intervention | Recent evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Provide information | Labelling | Different types of labelling (reference size combined with calorie and GDA) showed no or at most a very small effect (Vermeer et al. [ |
| Naming and framing | Consumers respond to naming, independently of the actual size. Large sounding names (e.g. ‘double’) led to a decrease in intake (Just and Wansink [ | |
| Website | Educational website was effective in increasing awareness of reference serving sizes and overeating triggers (Poelman et al. [ | |
| Enable choice | Provide segmentation cues in food packaging | A segmentation cue in the form of a red potato chip was effective in decreasing consumption (Geier [ |
| Provide a smaller portion alongside the larger one | Introducing a smaller sized hot meal in the worksite cafeteria alongside the larger sized meal led 10% of consumers to choose the smaller (Vermeer et al. [ | |
| Implementation intentions | Using implementation intentions (specific behavioural plans, using an if—then structure) led to a decrease in the number of sweets selected (van Koningsbruggen [ | |
| Stop-signal training | Stop-signal training (a computer task, using images of high caloric, palatable foods versus non-food-related images, teaching individuals not to respond to the food images) led to a decrease in the number of sweets selected (van Koningsbruggen [ | |
| Portion control strategies | Use of 32 portion control strategies was promoted in an educational programme. After 3 months, the programme was effective in decreasing BMI; the effects were mediated by portion control behaviour (Poelman et al. [ | |
| Mindfulness exercise | Short mindful exercises were not effective in eliminating the portion-size effect (Cavanagh et al. [ | |
| Guide choice through changing the default | – | |
| Guide choice through incentives or disincentives | Remove the incentive to buy large amounts, which are seen to provide more value for money | Proportional pricing showed no effects in worksite cafeterias for a smaller and larger hot meal (300 vs. 500 g). Price differences were possibly too small due to lower prices in worksite cafeterias in general (Vermeer et al. [ |
| Restrict choice | Limit sugar-sweetened beverages sold in restaurants to a maximum of 473 ml (restriction, as proposed in New York in 2012) | A modest reduction in calories is to be expected, especially among young adults and children who are overweight (Wang and Vine [ |
| Eliminate choice | Decrease portion size | A reduction in the size of candies with 50% led to a decrease in energy intake among young adults (Marchiori et al. [ |
Ladder of intervention: British Nuffield Council on Bioethics, 2007
Fig. 1A ladder of interventions. From Public health: ethical issues, with kind permission from the Nuffield Council on Bioethics. Accessible at http://nuffieldbioethics.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Public-health-ethical-issues.pdf, © Nuffield Council on Bioethics 2007
Measurement instruments portion control behaviour
| Instrument and authors | Type of instrument |
|---|---|
| Portion control self-efficacy (Fast et al. [ | 12-item questionnaire on a 5-point scale, measuring self-efficacy toward portion control |
| Portion control strategies (Poelman et al. 2013) | 32-item questionnaire on a 5-point scale, measuring strategies to control the amount eaten. Strategies concern: purchase behaviour; meal and package sizes; stockpiling; food exposure and unplanned eating; mindless eating; and dining out, all-you-can-eat and take away food |
| Portion control practices (Spence et al. [ | 15-item questionnaire on a 4-point scale, measuring the use of portion control practices. 3 sub-scales include measurement strategy scale, eating strategy scale and purchasing strategy scale |