以在现实世界的杂货店购买健康食品为目标的助推干预措施能否减少与饮食相关的健康差异?四项对照试验的汇总分析。

IF 5.6 1区 医学 Q1 NUTRITION & DIETETICS
Josine M Stuber, Joline Wj Beulens, Guadalupe X Ayala, Sarah R Crozier, S Coosje Dijkstra, Shih-Fan Lin, Christina Vogel, Joreintje D Mackenbach
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在处于社会经济劣势的群体中,健康食品的推动可能更有效,或者特别有效。我们调查了社会经济和人口统计学特征在现实世界杂货店环境中针对健康食品的助推干预对食品购买模式的有效性中的调节作用。方法:我们汇集了来自多个试验的个体参与者数据。通过PubMed搜索确定合格的试验,并根据控制的现实世界设计进行选择,测试促进健康购买的助推干预,同时收集参与者的社会人口统计和购买数据。在四个符合条件的试验中,三个有纵向测量,一个包括单个时间点,两个是随机的,两个不是。应用推动包括放置推动(关注可用性或定位)和属性推动(展示和/或信息)的组合。协调的数据包括二分的社会经济和人口变量以及购买的水果和蔬菜占总购买量的百分比。采用基于线性混合效应模型的多水平元回归,通过纵向和横断面分析两种方法探讨修正效应。结果:纵向分析的分析样本包括638名参与者,其中以女性为主(76.3%),受教育程度较低(67.7%),平均年龄46.6岁(SD 13.5)。这些特征在横断面分析中相似(n = 855)。与对照组受试者相比,在纵向分析中,健康食品对干预组受试者购买水果和蔬菜的百分比没有主要影响(β = 0.00;95%ci -0.03, 0.09)。这种主效应不受教育程度的影响(β组*高等教育= -0.06;-0.40, 0.02),性别(β组*雌性= 0.13;-0.00, 0.61)与年龄无关(β组*老年人= -0.05;-0.39, 0.02)。横断面分析的结果具有可比性。结论:这项对四项对照试验的汇总分析没有发现证据支持杂货店对健康食品的助推干预在经历社会经济劣势的群体中更有效的假设。未来的研究需要通过严格的试验设计,使用综合干预策略,标准化的结果测量,同时评估具体情况的方法来解决已确定的局限性。这些见解将有助于更好地理解在杂货店环境中推动干预的公平性,以及减少与饮食相关的健康差异的潜力。试验注册:Ayala等人(2022)的试验已在ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01475526;2011年11月14日,https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT01475526), Huitink et al.(2020)在ISRCTN注册中心回顾性注册(ISRCTN39440735;2018年9月5日,https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN39440735), Vogel等人(2024)的研究在ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03518151;2018年4月24日,https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT03518151),最后由Stuber等人(2024)在荷兰试验登记处(ID NL7064, 2018年5月30日,https://www.onderzoekmetmensen.nl/en/trial/20990)登记。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Can nudge interventions targeting healthy food purchases in real-world grocery stores reduce diet-related health disparities? A pooled analysis of four controlled trials.

Background: Healthy food nudges may be more, or especially, effective among groups experiencing socioeconomic disadvantage. We investigated the modifying role of socioeconomic and demographic characteristics in the effectiveness of nudge interventions targeting healthy foods in real-world grocery store settings on food purchasing patterns.

Methods: We pooled individual participant data from multiple trials. Eligible trials were identified via a PubMed search and selected based on having a controlled real-world design, testing a nudging intervention promoting healthy purchases, while collecting participants' sociodemographic and purchasing data. Out of four eligible trials, three had longitudinal measurements, one consisted of a single time point, two were randomised and two were not. Applied nudges consisted of a combination of placement nudges (focussing on availability or positioning) and property nudges (presentation and/or information). Harmonised data included dichotomised socioeconomic and demographic variables and the percentage of purchased fruits and vegetables of total purchases. Multilevel meta-regression based on linear mixed-effects models were used to explore modifying effects using two approaches: longitudinal and cross-sectional analyses.

Results: The analytical sample in the longitudinal analysis comprised of 638 participants, who were predominantly female (76.3%), had a lower education attainment (67.7%), and a mean age of 46.6 years (SD 13.5). These characteristics were similar in the cross-sectional analysis (n = 855). Compared to control group participants, there was no main effect of healthy food nudges on the percentage of fruit and vegetable purchases by intervention group participants in the longitudinal analysis (β = 0.00; 95%CI -0.03, 0.09). This main effect was not modified by educational attainment (βgroup*higher education = -0.06; -0.40, 0.02), sex (βgroup*females = 0.13; -0.00, 0.61) nor age (βgroup*older adults = -0.05; -0.39, 0.02). Results from the cross-sectional analysis were comparable.

Conclusions: This pooled analyses of four controlled trials did not find evidence supporting the hypothesis that grocery store nudge interventions of healthy foods work more effectively among groups experiencing socioeconomic disadvantage. Future studies are needed to address the identified limitations through rigorous trial design using comprehensive interventional strategies, standardised outcome measures, while also evaluating context-specific approaches. Such insights will help to better understand the equity of nudging interventions in grocery store settings and the potential for reducing diet-related health disparities.

Trial registrations: The trial of Ayala et al. (2022) was retrospectively registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01475526; at 14 November 2011, https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT01475526 ), the of Huitink et al. (2020) was retrospectively registered in the ISRCTN registry (ISRCTN39440735; at 5 September 2018, https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN39440735 ), the of Vogel et al. (2024) was retrospectively registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03518151; at 24 April 2018, https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT03518151 ), and finally of Stuber et al. (2024) was registered in the Dutch Trial Register (ID NL7064, at 30 May 2018, https://www.onderzoekmetmensen.nl/en/trial/20990 ).

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来源期刊
CiteScore
13.80
自引率
3.40%
发文量
138
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity (IJBNPA) is an open access, peer-reviewed journal offering high quality articles, rapid publication and wide diffusion in the public domain. IJBNPA is devoted to furthering the understanding of the behavioral aspects of diet and physical activity and is unique in its inclusion of multiple levels of analysis, including populations, groups and individuals and its inclusion of epidemiology, and behavioral, theoretical and measurement research areas.
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