国家级健康默认饮料(HDB)法之前儿童膳食和健康饮料选择的基线评估

M. McGurk, Stephanie L. Cacal, Uyen Vu, T. Sentell, Toby Beckelman, Jessica Lee, Alyssa Yang, C. Pirkle
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引用次数: 1

摘要

2020年1月,夏威夷州成为第二个制定健康默认饮料法的州,该法要求餐馆在儿童餐中提供健康默认饮料。这项观察性研究呈现了儿童菜单和餐点餐厅的基线特征。该研究描述了法律面前的饮料选择,为HDB未来的政策语言、实施和评估提供信息。2019年11月至12月,数据来自全州范围内拥有健康检查许可证的独特餐厅样本(N=383)。通过网站评论、电话和亲自访问,分别对餐厅的儿童菜单和餐点进行评估。对膳食的饮料类型和合规性进行了评估。Logistic回归被用来估计拥有儿童菜单和膳食的可能性。大多数餐厅提供全方位服务(70.2%)和非连锁餐厅(67.9%)。虽然49.3%的餐厅有儿童菜单,但只有16.7%的餐厅提供儿童餐。儿童菜单的重要预测因素是全方位服务、国家/国际或当地连锁店、邻岛(非檀香山)地点和酒店地点。只有作为一家国家/国际连锁店才能显著预测是否会有儿童餐。尽管35.9%的儿童膳食提供非加糖饮料(SSB)选项,但只有3.1%的儿童提供符合法律的饮料。纳入SSB默认选项(60.9%)和未指定默认饮料的类型是不遵守法律规定的主要因素。结果支持HDB法规的必要性,特别是对于最有可能提供儿童餐的国家/国际连锁店,并提供数据为其他司法管辖区的政策提供信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Baseline Assessment of Children’s Meals and Healthy Beverage Options Prior to a State-Level Healthy Default Beverage (HDB) Law
In January 2020, Hawai‘i became the second state with a healthy default beverage (HDB) law, requiring restaurants to offer HDBs with their children’s meals. This observational study presents baseline characteristics of restaurants with a children’s menu and meal. The study describes pre-law beverage options to inform future HDB policy language, implementation, and evaluation. Between November and December 2019, data were collected from a statewide sample of unique restaurants (N = 383) with health inspection permits. Restaurants were assessed separately for a children’s menu and meal using website reviews, telephone calls, and in-person visits. Meals were evaluated for pre-law beverage type and compliance. Logistic regression was used to estimate the likelihood of having a children’s menu and meal. Most of the restaurants were full-service (70.2%) and non-chains (67.9%). While 49.3% of restaurants had a children’s menu, only 16.7% had a children’s meal. Significant predictors of having a children’s menu were being full-service, national/international or local chains, neighbor island (non-Honolulu) locations, and hotel locations. Only being a national/international chain significantly predicted having a children’s meal. Although 35.9% of children’s meals offered a non–sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) option, only 3.1% offered law-compliant beverages. Inclusion of an SSB default option (60.9%) and not specifying the type of default beverage were the predominant factors for pre-law non-compliance. Results support the need for HDB regulations, especially for national/international chains, which were most likely to have children’s meals, and provide data to inform policies in other jurisdictions.
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