Pettigrew Simone, Talati Zenobia, Miller Caroline, Dixon Helen, Kelly Bridget, Ball Kylie
School of Psychology and Speech Pathology, Curtin University, Kent St, Bentley, WA 6102, Australia.
South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute, North Terrace, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia; University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia.
Appetite. 2017 Feb 1;109:115-123. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2016.11.034. Epub 2016 Nov 25.
There is strong interest in front-of-pack labels (FoPLs) as a potential mechanism for improving diets, and therefore health, at the population level. The present study examined Australian consumers' preferences for different types and attributes of FoPLs to provide additional insights into optimal methods of presenting nutrition information on the front of food packets. Much research to date has focused on two main types of FoPLs - those expressing daily intake values for specific nutrients and those utilising 'traffic light' colour coding. This study extends this work by: (i) including the new Health Star Rating system recently introduced in Australia and New Zealand; (ii) allowing a large sample of consumers to self-nominate the evaluation criteria they consider to be most important in choosing between FoPLs; (iii) oversampling consumers of lower socioeconomic status; and (iv) including children, who consume and purchase food in their own right and also influence their parents' food purchase decisions. A cross-sectional online survey of 2058 Australian consumers (1558 adults and 500 children) assessed preferences between a daily intake FoPL, a traffic light FoPL, and the Health Star Rating FoPL. Across the whole sample and among all respondent subgroups (males vs females; adults vs children; lower socioeconomic status vs medium-high socioeconomic status; normal weight vs overweight/obese), the Health Star Rating was the most preferred FoPL (44%) and the daily intake guide was the least preferred (20%). The reasons most commonly provided by respondents to explain their preference related to ease of use, interpretive content, and salience. The findings suggest that a simple to use, interpretive, star-based food label represents a population-based nutrition promotion strategy that is considered helpful by a broad range of consumers.
包装正面标签(FoPLs)作为一种在人群层面改善饮食从而增进健康的潜在机制,受到了广泛关注。本研究调查了澳大利亚消费者对不同类型和属性的包装正面标签的偏好,以便为在食品包装正面呈现营养信息的最佳方法提供更多见解。迄今为止,许多研究都集中在两种主要类型的包装正面标签上——一种是列出特定营养素每日摄入量的标签,另一种是使用“红绿灯”颜色编码的标签。本研究通过以下方式拓展了这项工作:(i)纳入了最近在澳大利亚和新西兰推出的新健康星级评定系统;(ii)让大量消费者自行提名他们认为在选择包装正面标签时最重要的评估标准;(iii)对社会经济地位较低的消费者进行过度抽样;(iv)纳入儿童,儿童自身会消费和购买食品,并且会影响父母的食品购买决策。一项对2058名澳大利亚消费者(1558名成年人和500名儿童)进行的横断面在线调查评估了每日摄入量包装正面标签、红绿灯包装正面标签和健康星级评定包装正面标签之间的偏好。在整个样本以及所有受访者子群体中(男性与女性;成年人与儿童;社会经济地位较低与社会经济地位中等偏高;正常体重与超重/肥胖),健康星级评定是最受青睐的包装正面标签(44%),而每日摄入量指南是最不受青睐的(20%)。受访者最常给出的解释其偏好的原因与易用性、解释性内容和显著性有关。研究结果表明,一种简单易用、具有解释性的星级食品标签代表了一种基于人群的营养促进策略,受到广泛消费者的认可。