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The impact of interventions to promote healthier ready-to-eat meals (to eat in, to take away, or to be delivered) sold by specific food outlets open to the general public : a systematic review

Authors :
Hillier-Brown, FC
Summerbell, CD
Moore, HJ
Routen, A
Lake, AA
Adams, J
White, M
Araujo-Soares, V
Abraham, C
Adamson, AJ
Brown, TJ
Hillier-Brown, FC [0000-0001-9031-4801]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
Obesity reviews, 2017, Vol.18(2), pp.227-246 [Peer Reviewed Journal]
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
John Wiley, 2017.

Abstract

Summary Introduction Ready-to-eat meals sold by food outlets that are accessible to the general public are an important target for public health intervention. We conducted a systematic review to assess the impact of such interventions. Methods Studies of any design and duration that included any consumer-level or food-outlet-level before-and-after data were included. Results Thirty studies describing 34 interventions were categorized by type and coded against the Nuffield intervention ladder: restrict choice = trans fat law (n = 1), changing pre-packed children's meal content (n = 1) and food outlet award schemes (n = 2); guide choice = price increases for unhealthier choices (n = 1), incentive (contingent reward) (n = 1) and price decreases for healthier choices (n = 2); enable choice = signposting (highlighting healthier/unhealthier options) (n = 10) and telemarketing (offering support for the provision of healthier options to businesses via telephone) (n = 2); and provide information = calorie labelling law (n = 12), voluntary nutrient labelling (n = 1) and personalized receipts (n = 1). Most interventions were aimed at adults in US fast food chains and assessed customer-level outcomes. More ‘intrusive’ interventions that restricted or guided choice generally showed a positive impact on food-outlet-level and customer-level outcomes. However, interventions that simply provided information or enabled choice had a negligible impact. Conclusion Interventions to promote healthier ready-to-eat meals sold by food outlets should restrict choice or guide choice through incentives/disincentives. Public health policies and practice that simply involve providing information are unlikely to be effective.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Obesity reviews, 2017, Vol.18(2), pp.227-246 [Peer Reviewed Journal]
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..09e0f3fd130737428dd6210813becb6c