| Literature DB >> 32594907 |
Rachel Pechey1, Gareth J Hollands2, Patrice Carter3, Theresa M Marteau2.
Abstract
Altering the availability of products (e.g. food, alcohol or tobacco products) is one potential intervention to change behaviours to help reduce preventable premature deaths worldwide. However, research on these interventions lacks consistent conceptualisation, hindering clear reporting and cumulative synthesis. This paper proposes a conceptual framework - categorising intervention types and summarising constituent components - with which interventions can be reliably described and evidence synthesised. Three principal distinctions are proposed: interventions altering: (i) Absolute Availability (changing the overall number of options, while keeping the proportions comprised by any subsets of options constant); (ii) Relative Availability (changing the proportion comprised by a subset of options, yet keeping the overall number of options constant); (iii) Absolute and Relative Availability (changing both the overall number of options and the proportions comprised by subsets of options). These are subdivided into those targeting (a) a product or (b) a category of products. Mechanisms that might underlie each of these intervention types are discussed, and implications for future research highlighted. The proposed framework aims to facilitate study of a set of interventions that could contribute significantly to healthier behaviour across populations.Entities:
Keywords: Availability; Conceptual framework; Health-related behaviour; Intervention
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32594907 PMCID: PMC7322874 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-020-09052-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Example of terms used to describe interventions altering product Availability in physical micro-environments
| Term used to describe intervention | Targeted change | Example reference(s) |
|---|---|---|
| Availability | Presence or absence of products | Wilcox et al. [ Wilbur et al. [ |
| Number of different products | Perry et al. [ Bartholomew and Jowers [ | |
| Proportion comprised by a subset of products | Fiske et al. (2004): Increasing low-fat products and decreasing high-fat products in vending machines | |
| Assortment size | Number of different products | Sela et al. [ |
| Assortment structure1 | Proportion comprised by a subset of products | Van Kleef et al. [ |
| Food provision | Number of different products | Anderson et al. [ |
| Stockpiling | Number of units of a particular product | Chandon & Wansink [ |
1Van Kleef et al. refer to “assortment structure (i.e. availability)” in their abstract
Fig. 1Proposed Availability intervention types. A and B represent different product sets (e.g. A could be healthier snacks and B less healthy snacks; or A larger chocolate bars and B smaller chocolate bars); colours are used to indicate different products within each product set. 1 N.b. In practice, this is likely to have unrecorded impact on Relative Availability, as other items are likely to be available but not assessed
Fig. 2The space in which Availability can be intervened upon in the context of two subsets of products (lower energy and higher energy foods): Holding the number of lower energy items constant (horizontal lines); holding the number of higher energy items constant (vertical lines); holding the overall number of items available constant (examples shown as dashed rays); holding the ratio of lower energy: higher energy items constant (examples shown as solid rays)
Fig. 3Example of a physical micro-environment where Availability could be intervened upon. Adapted from: https://pixabay.com/en/supermarket-shelf-products-snacks-1094815/
Fig. 4Potential (and not exhaustive) pathways from altering Availability to changing behaviour.
1. Availability → Probability of product in target category being most preferred option → Likelihood of selection.
2. Availability → Social norms altered to suggest greater or lesser consumption of these items by others → (Liking →) Likelihood of selection.
3. Availability → Probability of attracting visual attention → Liking (at least for liked items) → Likelihood of selection