1. Nutrition-related claims lead parents to choose less healthy drinks for young children: a randomized trial in a virtual convenience store
- Author
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Marissa G Hall, Allison J Lazard, Isabella CA Higgins, Jonathan L Blitstein, Emily W Duffy, Eva Greenthal, Sarah Sorscher, and Lindsey Smith Taillie
- Subjects
Beverages ,Marketing ,Parents ,Sugar-Sweetened Beverages ,Pediatric Obesity ,Original Research Communications ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Child, Preschool ,Humans ,Infant ,food and beverages ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Child - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages, including fruit drinks (i.e., fruit-flavored drinks containing added sugar), contributes to childhood obesity. OBJECTIVES: We aimed to examine whether nutrition-related claims on fruit drinks influence purchasing among parents and lead to misperceptions of healthfulness. METHODS: We conducted an experiment in a virtual convenience store with 2219 parents of children ages 1–5 y. Parents were randomly assigned to view fruit drinks displaying 1 of 3 claims (“No artificial sweeteners,” “100% Vitamin C,” and “100% All Natural”) or no claim (i.e., control group). Parents selected among each of 2 drinks for their young child: 1) a fruit drink or 100% juice (primary outcome), and 2) a fruit drink or water. RESULTS: When choosing between a fruit drink and 100% juice, 45% of parents who viewed the fruit drink with the “No artificial sweeteners” claim, 51% who viewed the “100% Vitamin C” claim, and 54% who viewed the “100% All Natural” claim selected the fruit drink, compared with 32% in the no-claim control group (all P 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Nutrition-related claims led parents to choose less healthy beverages for their children and misled them about the healthfulness of fruit drinks. Labeling regulations could mitigate misleading marketing of fruit drinks. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT04381481.
- Published
- 2022
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