The primary objective of this study is to test the relative effects of climate-impact menu label designs on the healthfulness of consumers' fast-food meal choices. Participants will complete hypothetical online meal ordering tasks using a survey which emulates the online menus of two types of fast-food chain restaurants: a burger restaurant and a sandwich restaurant. Participants will be randomized the view both menus, presented in random order, with one of five labeling conditions applied. Secondary objectives include examining total greenhouse gas emissions per meal order, energy and nutrient content of meals ordered, prices of meals ordered, and, through a post-order survey, noticeability, and perceptions, and knowledge and understanding of labels between the conditions.
This online randomized trial will test the relative effects of climate impact menu label designs on the healthfulness of consumers' fast-food meal choices and perceptions of menu items. The survey research firm National Opinion Research Center (NORC) will recruit a nationally representative sample of 6,000 adults aged 18 years and older who speak English and reside in the United States from the Center's AmeriSpeak Panel. Participants will complete a between-subjects online experiment in which the participants will be randomized to view two fast-food online ordering menus (in randomized order) with one of five labeling schemes applied: (1) a QR code on all items (control); (2) a low climate impact label on all low impact items (3) a high climate impact label on high impact items; (4) traffic light labels on all items by level of impact; and (5) climate grade labels on all items by level of impact. Each restaurant menu will be presented across 2 pages; page 1 will display all main items, and page 2 will display categories for side, dessert, and drink items. Labels will only appear alongside main menu items and will be assigned using thresholds for greenhouse gas emissions set a priori in kilograms of carbon dioxide (CO2) equivalent per kilogram of food. Each hypothetical order must include between 1 and 4 items. Participants will be required to select 1 main item and, optionally, up to 3 additional items (drinks, sides, desserts). After completing the meal ordering task, participants will be prompted to answer questions about the whether the participant noticed the correct label for the participant's condition, whether the participant used the label when making meal selections, perceptions of the labeled menu items and the labeling condition which the participants were randomized to view, knowledge of the relative climate impact of food items and consumer behaviors, and support of governmental and policies and practices regarding food and nutrition. Additionally, participants will be asked about level of food security, use of GLP-1 agonists, personal values, dietary patterns, and other demographic information. Participation in the study will last approximately 10 minutes. The primary outcome will be the healthfulness of meal orders selected from the online menu, indicated by a modified Nutrient Profile Index meal score for all food items ordered. Secondary outcomes will be total greenhouse gas emissions per meal ordered, total calories ordered, whether a sugar-sweetened beverage was ordered, and perceived message effectiveness of the climate-impact labels. Analyses will be conducted overall (summing the meal selections across both restaurants) and stratified by restaurant.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
6,294
Participants will view two fast-food restaurant menus presented in a random order. Each menu will include main, side, dessert, and drink items, and each menu item will be displayed with an image of the item, name, price, and total calories. For main items only, Control (QR) labels will be displayed beneath each item. Participants will be instructed to select at least 1 and up to 4 menu items for a hypothetical meal order. Participants will be required to select a main item and, optionally, up to 3 additional items (drinks, sides, desserts).
Participants will view two fast-food restaurant menus presented in a random order. Each menu will include main, side, dessert, and drink items, and each menu item will be displayed with an image of the item, name, price, and total calories. For main items only, Low Climate Impact labels will be displayed beneath each item. Participants will be instructed to select at least 1 and up to 4 menu items for a hypothetical meal order. Participants will be required to select a main item and, optionally, up to 3 additional items (drinks, sides, desserts).
Participants will view two fast-food restaurant menus presented in a random order. Each menu will include main, side, dessert, and drink items, and each menu item will be displayed with an image of the item, name, price, and total calories. For main items only, High Climate Impact labels will be displayed beneath select items. Participants will be instructed to select at least 1 and up to 4 menu items for a hypothetical meal order. Participants will be required to select a main item and, optionally, up to 3 additional items (drinks, sides, desserts).
Participants will view two fast-food restaurant menus presented in a random order. Each menu will include main, side, dessert, and drink items, and each menu item will be displayed with an image of the item, name, price, and total calories. For main items only, Traffic Light labels will be displayed beneath each item. Participants will be instructed to select at least 1 and up to 4 menu items for a hypothetical meal order. Participants will be required to select a main item and, optionally, up to 3 additional items (drinks, sides, desserts).
Participants will view two fast-food restaurant menus presented in a random order. Each menu will include main, side, dessert, and drink items, and each menu item will be displayed with an image of the item, name, price, and total calories. For main items only, Climate Grade labels will be displayed beneath each item. Participants will be instructed to select at least 1 and up to 4 menu items for a hypothetical meal order. Participants will be required to select a main item and, optionally, up to 3 additional items (drinks, sides, desserts).
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Modified Nutrient Profile Index score
Healthfulness of fast-food meal selections, measured with a modified Nutrient Profile Index (NPI) score. NPI scores are based on the United Kingdom (UK) Ofcom Nutrient Profiling Model, which is used to score individual foods in the UK to determine which ones can be marketed to children. The NPI is a 0 to 100-point score for foods; a score of \>=64 is considered healthy. NPI awards points from nutrients to encourage (e.g., fiber, protein) and nutrients of concern (e.g., sodium, sugar) per 100 grams. The investigators will generate a modified NPI score to evaluate the healthfulness of full meals comprised of multiple food items. This measure will be determined by calculating the weighted mean NPI score of all food items selected per meal, with each item's NPI score weighted by its proportionate contribution of mass in grams to the total mass of the meal. Beverages are excluded and assessed through secondary outcomes.
Time frame: During online survey ordering task, up to 10 minutes
Nutrient Profile Index score
The healthfulness of the fast-food main item selections, measured with a Nutrient Profile Index (NPI) score. NPI scores are based on the United Kingdom (UK) Ofcom Nutrient Profiling Model, which is used to score individual foods in the UK to determine which ones can be marketed to children. The NPI is a 0 to 100-point score for foods; a score of \>=64 is considered healthy. NPI awards points from nutrients to encourage (e.g., fiber, protein) and nutrients of concern (e.g., sodium, sugar) per 100 grams.
Time frame: During online survey ordering task, up to 10 minutes
Total greenhouse gas emissions
Cumulative total kilograms of carbon equivalent (kgCO2e) per kilogram of food for all meal items. Beverages are excluded and assessed through other secondary outcomes. Beverages are excluded and assessed through secondary outcomes (#5 \& #11).
Time frame: During online survey ordering task, up to 10 minutes
Frequency of red meat selected
Measured as a dichotomous variable (yes/no) indicating whether participants' hypothetical meal orders include an item containing red meat.
Time frame: During online survey ordering task, up to 10 minutes
Total energy selected (number of calories)
The total number of calories in participants' hypothetical meal orders, calculated as the sum of calories across all menu items selected. Higher values indicate more calories selected.
Time frame: During online survey ordering task, up to 10 minutes
Total amount of saturated fat (grams) selected
The total amount of saturated fat in participants' hypothetical meal orders, calculated as the sum of saturated fat (grams) across all menu items selected. Higher values indicate more saturated fat selected.
Time frame: During online survey ordering task, up to 10 minutes
Total amount of sugar (grams) selected
The total amount of sugar in participants' hypothetical meal orders, calculated as the sum of sugar (grams) across all menu items selected. Higher values indicate more sugar selected.
Time frame: During online survey ordering task, up to 10 minutes
Total amount of protein (grams) selected
The total amount of protein in participants' hypothetical meal orders, calculated as the sum of protein (grams) across all menu items selected. Higher values indicate more protein selected.
Time frame: During online survey ordering task, up to 10 minutes
Total amount of fiber (grams) selected
The total amount of fiber in participants' hypothetical meal orders, calculated as the sum of fiber (grams) across all menu items selected. Higher values indicate more fiber selected.
Time frame: During online survey ordering task, up to 10 minutes
Total amount of sodium (milligrams) selected
The total amount of sodium in participants' hypothetical meal orders, calculated as the sum of sodium (milligrams) across all menu items selected. Higher values indicate more sodium selected.
Time frame: During online survey ordering task, up to 10 minutes
Frequency of sugar-sweetened beverage selected
Measured as a dichotomous variable (yes/no) indicating whether participants' hypothetical meal orders include a sugar-sweetened beverage.
Time frame: During online survey ordering task, up to 10 minutes
Percentage of participants with knowledge of the climate impact of foods
This outcome will measure participants' knowledge of the relative climate impacts of meals with different main proteins. Participants are prompted to numerically rank three meals by climate impact. The exact prompt is: "Please rank the below food options from smallest (1) to largest (3) climate impact. Write "1" next to the food option with the smallest climate impact, "2" next to the option with the middle climate impact, and "3" next to the option with the largest climate impact." Each rank item reads "Meal in which the main protein is beef", "Meal in which the main protein is chicken", and "Meal in which the main protein is tofu". Responses will be analyzed by % who correctly rank the 3 items by experimental condition.
Time frame: During online survey post-ordering task, up to 10 minutes
Percentage of participants with knowledge of the climate impact of menu items
This outcome will measure participants' knowledge of the relative climate impacts of menu items by label condition. Via two questions, one per restaurant, participants are prompted to indicate "Which menu item below has a larger contribution to climate change (i.e., produces more greenhouse gas emissions)?". Three response options are provided: two images of main menu items by label condition and "The menu items have the same climate impact". Responses will be analyzed as the % who answer both questions correctly by label condition.
Time frame: During online survey post-ordering task, up to 10 minutes
Frequency of participants with attention to labels
Measured by whether participants noticed labels on the menus, in addition to calorie labels. The exact question is, "On the menus you saw, did you notice any labels (other than calories) next to or below the menu items?" Response options are "Yes", "No", and "Don't Know".
Time frame: During online survey post-ordering task, up to 10 minutes
Frequency of participants who recall labels that also correctly identify purpose of labels
Measured by whether participants who noticed labels, in addition to calorie labels, correctly identify the purpose of the labels. Response options are "Sugar", "Sodium", "QR code", "Climate Impact", "Organic", "Healthy", "Unhealthy", "None of these", and "I don't know/ I can't remember".
Time frame: During online survey post-ordering task, up to 10 minutes
Perceived message effectiveness (PME) as assessed by the University of North Carolina (UNC) PME scale
This modified 4-item UNC-PME scale measures how much the label placed beneath high climate impact menu items, discouraged consumption or evoked concern or unpleasantness about consumption of high climate impact foods. Responses to all questions will be measured on a 5-point unipolar Likert scale from 1=Not at all to 5= A great deal. The higher the score, the higher the perceived effectiveness.
Time frame: During online survey post-ordering task, up to 10 minutes
Total price of meal order
Measured by the cumulative total price (USD) of participants' hypothetical meal orders per restaurant, based on the prices displayed on the survey menus.
Time frame: During online survey ordering task, up to 10 minutes
Perceived level of appeal of food items
Measured by the level of appeal attributed to 8 main menu items, 4 from each restaurant, by label condition. All items are assessed on a 7-point Likert scale with response options of "Very unappealing", "Unappealing", "Slightly unappealing", "Neither appealing nor unappealing", "Slightly appealing", "Appealing", "Very appealing" for each food item. Higher score, higher appeal.
Time frame: During online survey post-ordering task, up to 10 minutes
Perceived level of healthfulness of food items
Measured by the level of healthfulness attributed to 8 main menu items, 4 from each restaurant, by label condition. All items are assessed on a 7-point Likert scale with response options of "Very unhealthy", "Unhealthy", "Slightly unhealthy", "Neither unhealthy nor healthy", "Slightly healthy", "Healthy," "Very healthy" for each food item.
Time frame: During online survey post-ordering task, up to 10 minutes
Perceived level of climate impact of food items
Measured by the level of climate impact attributed to 8 main menu items, 4 from each restaurant, by label condition. All items are assessed on a 7-point Likert scale with response options of "Extremely high climate impact", "Very high climate impact", "High climate impact", "Moderate climate impact", "Low climate impact", "Very low climate impact", "Extremely low climate impact" for each food item.
Time frame: During online survey post-ordering task, up to 10 minutes
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