Behaviour and Health Research Unit, Institute of Public Health, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Tobacco and Alcohol Research Group, School of Psychological Science, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
Addiction. 2021 Jan;116(1):41-52. doi: 10.1111/add.15072. Epub 2020 May 8.
Evidence from tobacco research suggests that health warning labels (HWLs) depicting the adverse consequences of consumption change smoking behaviours, with image-and-text (also known as 'pictorial' or 'graphic') HWLs most effective. There is an absence of evidence concerning the potential impact of HWLs placed on alcohol products on selection of those products. This study aimed to obtain a preliminary assessment of the possible impact of (i) image-and-text, (ii) text-only, and (iii) image-only HWLs on selection of alcoholic versus non-alcoholic drinks.
A between-subjects randomised experiment with a 2 (image: present versus absent) × 2 (text: present versus absent) factorial design.
The study was conducted on the online survey platform Qualtrics.
Participants (n = 6024) were adults over the age of 18 who consumed beer or wine regularly (i.e. at least once a week), recruited through a market research agency.
Participants were randomised to one of four groups varying in the HWL displayed on the packaging of alcoholic drinks: (i) image-and-text HWL; (ii) text-only HWL; (iii) image-only HWL; and (iv) no HWL. HWLs depicted bowel cancer, breast cancer and liver cancer, which were each displayed twice across six alcoholic drinks. Each group viewed six alcoholic and six non-alcoholic drinks and selected one drink that they would like to consume.
The primary outcome was the proportion of participants selecting an alcoholic versus a non-alcoholic drink.
Alcoholic drink selection was lower for all HWL types compared with no HWL (image-and-text: 56%; image-only: 49%; text-only: 61%; no HWL: 77%), with selection lowest for HWLs that included an image. Image-and-text HWLs reduced the odds of selecting an alcoholic drink compared with text-only HWLs (OR = 0.80, 95% CI = 0.69, 0.92), but increased the odds of selecting an alcoholic drink compared with image-only HWLs (OR = 1.34, 95% CI = 1.16, 1.55).
Health warning labels communicating the increased risk of cancers associated with alcohol consumption reduced selection of alcoholic versus non-alcoholic drinks in a hypothetical choice task in an online setting; labels displaying images had the largest effect. Their impact in laboratory and real-world field settings using physical products awaits investigation.
来自烟草研究的证据表明,描述消费后果的健康警示标签(HWL)可以改变吸烟行为,其中图像和文字(也称为“图片”或“图形”)HWL 最有效。关于在酒精产品上放置 HWL 对这些产品选择的潜在影响,目前还没有证据。本研究旨在初步评估(i)图像和文字、(ii)仅文字和(iii)仅图像 HWL 对选择酒精与非酒精饮料的可能影响。
一项 2(图像:有与无)×2(文本:有与无)因子设计的受试者间随机实验。
该研究在在线调查平台 Qualtrics 上进行。
参与者(n=6024)为年龄在 18 岁以上、经常饮用啤酒或葡萄酒(即每周至少一次)的成年人,通过市场研究机构招募。
参与者被随机分配到四种不同的酒精饮料包装上显示的 HWL 组之一:(i)图像和文字 HWL;(ii)仅文字 HWL;(iii)仅图像 HWL;和(iv)无 HWL。HWL 描绘了结肠癌、乳腺癌和肝癌,这三种癌症在六种酒精饮料中各显示两次。每个组都查看了六种酒精饮料和六种非酒精饮料,并选择了一种他们想要饮用的饮料。
主要结果是参与者选择酒精与非酒精饮料的比例。
与无 HWL 相比,所有 HWL 类型的酒精饮料选择率均较低(图像和文字:56%;仅图像:49%;仅文字:61%;无 HWL:77%),包含图像的 HWL 选择率最低。与仅文字 HWL 相比,图像和文字 HWL 降低了选择酒精饮料的几率(OR=0.80,95%CI=0.69,0.92),但与仅图像 HWL 相比,选择酒精饮料的几率增加(OR=1.34,95%CI=1.16,1.55)。
在在线环境下的假设选择任务中,传达与酒精消费相关的癌症风险增加的健康警示标签减少了对酒精与非酒精饮料的选择;显示图像的标签产生了最大的影响。它们在使用实物产品的实验室和真实环境现场设置中的影响有待调查。