Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States of America.
Department of Nutrition, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States of America.
PLoS Med. 2023 Sep 18;20(9):e1004284. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1004284. eCollection 2023 Sep.
Policies to reduce red meat intake are important for mitigating climate change and improving public health. We tested the impact of taxes and warning labels on red meat purchases in the United States. The main study question was, will taxes and warning labels reduce red meat purchases?
We recruited 3,518 US adults to participate in a shopping task in a naturalistic online grocery store from October 18, 2021 to October 28, 2021. Participants were randomized to one of 4 conditions: control (no tax or warning labels, n = 887), warning labels (health and environmental warning labels appeared next to products containing red meat, n = 891), tax (products containing red meat were subject to a 30% price increase, n = 874), or combined warning labels + tax (n = 866). We used fractional probit and Poisson regression models to assess the co-primary outcomes, percent, and count of red meat purchases, and linear regression to assess the secondary outcomes of nutrients purchased. Most participants identified as women, consumed red meat 2 or more times per week, and reported doing all of their household's grocery shopping. The warning, tax, and combined conditions led to lower percent of red meat-containing items purchased, with 39% (95% confidence interval (CI) [38%, 40%]) of control participants' purchases containing red meat, compared to 36% (95% CI [35%, 37%], p = 0.001) of warning participants, 34% (95% CI [33%, 35%], p < 0.001) of tax participants, and 31% (95% CI [30%, 32%], p < 0.001) of combined participants. A similar pattern was observed for count of red meat items. Compared to the control, the combined condition reduced calories purchased (-312.0 kcals, 95% CI [-590.3 kcals, -33.6 kcals], p = 0.027), while the tax (-10.4 g, 95% CI [-18.2 g, -2.5 g], p = 0.01) and combined (-12.8 g, 95% CI [-20.7 g, -4.9 g], p = 0.001) conditions reduced saturated fat purchases; no condition affected sodium purchases. Warning labels decreased the perceived healthfulness and environmental sustainability of red meat, while taxes increased perceived cost. The main limitations were that the study differed in sociodemographic characteristics from the US population, and only about 30% to 40% of the US population shops for groceries online.
Warning labels and taxes reduced red meat purchases in a naturalistic online grocery store. Trial Registration: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ NCT04716010.
减少红肉摄入量的政策对于缓解气候变化和改善公众健康非常重要。我们在美国测试了税收和警告标签对红肉购买的影响。主要研究问题是,税收和警告标签会减少红肉购买吗?
我们招募了 3518 名美国成年人,于 2021 年 10 月 18 日至 10 月 28 日在一个自然在线杂货店购物任务中参与。参与者被随机分配到以下 4 个条件之一:对照组(无税或警告标签,n=887)、警告标签组(健康和环境警告标签出现在含有红肉的产品旁边,n=891)、税收组(含有红肉的产品价格上涨 30%,n=874)或联合警告标签+税收组(n=866)。我们使用分数概率和泊松回归模型评估主要结局指标,即购买的红肉百分比和数量,以及线性回归评估购买的营养素的次要结局指标。大多数参与者为女性,每周食用红肉 2 次或以上,并表示他们负责家庭的所有杂货店购物。警告、税收和联合条件导致购买的含红肉物品百分比降低,对照组参与者购买的含红肉物品中,39%(95%置信区间[38%,40%])为控制组,而警告组为 36%(95%置信区间[35%,37%],p=0.001),税收组为 34%(95%置信区间[33%,35%],p<0.001),联合组为 31%(95%置信区间[30%,32%],p<0.001)。购买的红肉数量也呈现出类似的模式。与对照组相比,联合条件减少了购买的卡路里量(-312.0 卡路里,95%置信区间[-590.3 卡路里,-33.6 卡路里],p=0.027),而税收组(-10.4 克,95%置信区间[-18.2 克,-2.5 克],p=0.01)和联合组(-12.8 克,95%置信区间[-20.7 克,-4.9 克],p=0.001)减少了饱和脂肪的购买量;没有条件影响钠的购买量。警告标签降低了人们对红肉的健康和环境可持续性的认知,而税收则增加了人们对成本的认知。主要限制因素是,该研究在社会人口统计学特征方面与美国人口存在差异,并且只有约 30%至 40%的美国人口在网上购买杂货。
警告标签和税收减少了自然在线杂货店中的红肉购买量。