Pfinder Manuela, Heise Thomas L, Hilton Boon Michele, Pega Frank, Fenton Candida, Griebler Ursula, Gartlehner Gerald, Sommer Isolde, Katikireddi Srinivasa Vittal, Lhachimi Stefan K
AOK Baden-Württemberg, Department of Health Promotion, Presselstr. 19, Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, Germany, 70191.
University Hospital, University of Heidelberg, Department of General Practice and Health Services Research, Vossstrasse 2, Heidelberg, Bremen, Germany, D-69115.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2020 Apr 9;4(4):CD012333. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD012333.pub2.
Global prevalence of overweight and obesity are alarming. For tackling this public health problem, preventive public health and policy actions are urgently needed. Some countries implemented food taxes in the past and some were subsequently abolished. Some countries, such as Norway, Hungary, Denmark, Bermuda, Dominica, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, and the Navajo Nation (USA), specifically implemented taxes on unprocessed sugar and sugar-added foods. These taxes on unprocessed sugar and sugar-added foods are fiscal policy interventions, implemented to decrease their consumption and in turn reduce adverse health-related, economic and social effects associated with these food products.
To assess the effects of taxation of unprocessed sugar or sugar-added foods in the general population on the consumption of unprocessed sugar or sugar-added foods, the prevalence and incidence of overweight and obesity, and the prevalence and incidence of other diet-related health outcomes.
We searched CENTRAL, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, MEDLINE, Embase and 15 other databases and trials registers on 12 September 2019. We handsearched the reference list of all records of included studies, searched websites of international organisations and institutions, and contacted review advisory group members to identify planned, ongoing or unpublished studies.
We included studies with the following populations: children (0 to 17 years) and adults (18 years or older) from any country and setting. Exclusion applied to studies with specific subgroups, such as people with any disease who were overweight or obese as a side-effect of the disease. The review included studies with taxes on or artificial increases of selling prices for unprocessed sugar or food products that contain added sugar (e.g. sweets, ice cream, confectionery, and bakery products), or both, as intervention, regardless of the taxation level or price increase. In line with Cochrane Effective Practice and Organisation of Care (EPOC) criteria, we included randomised controlled trials (RCTs), cluster-randomised controlled trials (cRCTs), non-randomised controlled trials (nRCTs), controlled before-after (CBA) studies, and interrupted time series (ITS) studies. We included controlled studies with more than one intervention or control site and ITS studies with a clearly defined intervention time and at least three data points before and three after the intervention. Our primary outcomes were consumption of unprocessed sugar or sugar-added foods, energy intake, overweight, and obesity. Our secondary outcomes were substitution and diet, expenditure, demand, and other health outcomes.
Two review authors independently screened all eligible records for inclusion, assessed the risk of bias, and performed data extraction.Two review authors independently assessed the certainty of the evidence using the GRADE approach.
We retrieved a total of 24,454 records. After deduplicating records, 18,767 records remained for title and abstract screening. Of 11 potentially relevant studies, we included one ITS study with 40,210 household-level observations from the Hungarian Household Budget and Living Conditions Survey. The baseline ranged from January 2008 to August 2011, the intervention was implemented on September 2011, and follow-up was until December 2012 (16 months). The intervention was a tax - the so-called 'Hungarian public health product tax' - on sugar-added foods, including selected foods exceeding a specific sugar threshold value. The intervention includes co-interventions: the taxation of sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) and of foods high in salt or caffeine. The study provides evidence on the effect of taxing foods exceeding a specific sugar threshold value on the consumption of sugar-added foods. After implementation of the Hungarian public health product tax, the mean consumption of taxed sugar-added foods (measured in units of kg) decreased by 4.0% (standardised mean difference (SMD) -0.040, 95% confidence interval (CI) -0.07 to -0.01; very low-certainty evidence). The study was at low risk of bias in terms of performance bias, detection bias and reporting bias, with the shape of effect pre-specified and the intervention unlikely to have any effect on data collection. The study was at unclear risk of attrition bias and at high risk in terms of other bias and the independence of the intervention. We rated the certainty of the evidence as very low for the primary and secondary outcomes. The Hungarian public health product tax included a tax on sugar-added foods but did not include a tax on unprocessed sugar. We did not find eligible studies reporting on the taxation of unprocessed sugar. No studies reported on the primary outcomes of consumption of unprocessed sugar, energy intake, overweight, and obesity. No studies reported on the secondary outcomes of substitution and diet, demand, and other health outcomes. No studies reported on differential effects across population subgroups. We could not perform meta-analyses or pool study results.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There was very limited evidence and the certainty of the evidence was very low. Despite the reported reduction in consumption of taxed sugar-added foods, we are uncertain whether taxing unprocessed sugar or sugar-added foods has an effect on reducing their consumption and preventing obesity or other adverse health outcomes. Further robustly conducted studies are required to draw concrete conclusions on the effectiveness of taxing unprocessed sugar or sugar-added foods for reducing their consumption and preventing obesity or other adverse health outcomes.
全球超重和肥胖的患病率令人担忧。为解决这一公共卫生问题,迫切需要采取预防性公共卫生和政策行动。过去一些国家实施了食品税,后来有些被废除。一些国家,如挪威、匈牙利、丹麦、百慕大、多米尼克、圣文森特和格林纳丁斯以及纳瓦霍族(美国),专门对未加工糖和添加糖食品实施了税收。这些对未加工糖和添加糖食品的税收是财政政策干预措施,旨在减少其消费,进而减少与这些食品相关的不良健康、经济和社会影响。
评估对普通人群未加工糖或添加糖食品征税对未加工糖或添加糖食品消费、超重和肥胖的患病率及发病率,以及其他与饮食相关健康结局的患病率和发病率的影响。
我们于2019年9月12日检索了Cochrane系统评价中心注册库(CENTRAL)、Cochrane系统评价数据库、医学期刊数据库(MEDLINE)、荷兰医学文摘数据库(Embase)以及其他15个数据库和试验注册库。我们手工检索了纳入研究所有记录的参考文献列表,搜索了国际组织和机构的网站,并联系综述咨询小组成员以识别计划中、正在进行或未发表的研究。
我们纳入了以下人群的研究:来自任何国家和环境的儿童(0至17岁)和成年人(18岁及以上)。排除适用于特定亚组的研究,例如因疾病副作用而超重或肥胖的任何疾病患者。该综述纳入了对未加工糖或含有添加糖的食品(如糖果、冰淇淋、糕点和烘焙食品)征税或人为提高售价的研究,或两者兼有的研究作为干预措施,无论税收水平或价格上涨幅度如何。根据Cochrane有效实践与护理组织(EPOC)标准,我们纳入了随机对照试验(RCT)、整群随机对照试验(cRCT)、非随机对照试验(nRCT)、前后对照研究(CBA)以及中断时间序列(ITS)研究。我们纳入了具有多个干预或对照地点的对照研究以及具有明确界定干预时间且干预前至少有三个数据点和干预后至少有三个数据点的ITS研究。我们的主要结局是未加工糖或添加糖食品的消费、能量摄入、超重和肥胖。我们的次要结局是替代和饮食、支出、需求以及其他健康结局。
两位综述作者独立筛选所有符合条件的记录以纳入研究,评估偏倚风险,并进行数据提取。两位综述作者使用GRADE方法独立评估证据的确定性。
我们共检索到24,454条记录。去除重复记录后,剩余18,767条记录用于标题和摘要筛选。在11项潜在相关研究中,我们纳入了一项ITS研究,该研究来自匈牙利家庭预算与生活条件调查,有40,210个家庭层面的观察数据。基线时间范围为2008年1月至2011年8月,干预措施于2011年9月实施,随访至2012年12月(16个月)。干预措施是对添加糖食品征收一项税——即所谓的“匈牙利公共卫生产品税”——包括超过特定糖阈值的选定食品。该干预措施包括联合干预:对含糖饮料(SSB)以及高盐或高咖啡因食品征税。该研究提供了对超过特定糖阈值的食品征税对添加糖食品消费影响方面的证据。匈牙利公共卫生产品税实施后,被征税的添加糖食品的平均消费量(以千克为单位衡量)下降了4.0%(标准化均数差值(SMD)-0.040, 95%置信区间(CI)-0.07至-0.01;极低确定性证据)。该研究在实施偏倚、检测偏倚和报告偏倚方面处于低偏倚风险,效应形状预先设定,且干预措施不太可能对数据收集产生任何影响。该研究在失访偏倚方面风险不明确,在其他偏倚和干预独立性方面处于高风险。我们将主要和次要结局的证据确定性评为极低。匈牙利公共卫生产品税包括对添加糖食品征税,但不包括对未加工糖征税。我们未找到关于未加工糖征税的合格研究报告。没有研究报告未加工糖消费、能量摄入、超重和肥胖的主要结局。没有研究报告替代和饮食、需求以及其他健康结局的次要结局。没有研究报告不同人群亚组之间的差异效应。我们无法进行荟萃分析或汇总研究结果。
证据非常有限且证据确定性极低。尽管报告显示被征税的添加糖食品消费量有所减少,但我们不确定对未加工糖或添加糖食品征税是否对减少其消费以及预防肥胖或其他不良健康结局有效果。需要进一步开展严格的研究,以得出关于对未加工糖或添加糖食品征税以减少其消费以及预防肥胖或其他不良健康结局有效性的确切结论。