logo
ResearchBunny Logo
An examination of public support for 35 nutrition interventions across seven countries

Health and Fitness

An examination of public support for 35 nutrition interventions across seven countries

S. Pettigrew, L. Booth, et al.

This research reveals substantial public support for various nutrition interventions across seven countries, highlighting differences from country to country. With labeling and reformulation receiving strong backing, and fiscal interventions lagging behind, the findings are crucial for shaping health policies. Conducted by Simone Pettigrew, Leon Booth, Elizabeth Dunford, Tailane Scapin, Jacqui Webster, Jason Wu, Maoyi Tian, D. Praveen, and Gary Sacks.... show more
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Public support for evidence-based nutrition interventions can be an important determinant of government willingness to develop and implement such interventions. The aim of this study was to assess support for a broad range of nutrition interventions across seven countries: Australia, Canada, China, India, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Assessed interventions included those relating to food availability, affordability, reformulation, labelling, and promotion. METHODS: Approximately 1000 adults per country (total n = 7559) completed an online survey assessing support for 35 nutrition interventions/policies. ANOVA analyses were used to identify differences between countries on overall levels of support and by intervention category. Multiple regression analyses assessed demographic and diet-related factors associated with higher levels of support across the total sample and by country. RESULTS: Substantial levels of public support were found for the assessed interventions across the seven countries and five intervention categories. The highest levels were found in India (Mean across all interventions of 4.16 (SD 0.65) on a 5-point scale) and the lowest in the United States (Mean = 3.48, SD = 0.83). Support was strongest for interventions involving food labelling (Mean = 4.20, SD = 0.79) and food reformulation (Mean = 4.17, SD = 0.87), and weakest for fiscal interventions (Mean = 3.52, SD = 1.06). Consumer characteristics associated with stronger support were higher self-rated health, higher educational attainment, female sex, older age, and perceptions of consuming a healthy diet. CONCLUSION: The results indicate substantial support for a large range of nutrition interventions across the assessed countries, and hence governments could potentially be more proactive in developing and implementing such initiatives.
Publisher
European Journal of Clinical Nutrition
Published On
Sep 27, 2022
Authors
Simone Pettigrew, Leon Booth, Elizabeth Dunford, Tailane Scapin, Jacqui Webster, Jason Wu, Maoyi Tian, D. Praveen, Gary Sacks
Tags
nutrition interventions
public support
health policies
international study
dietary reform
support factors
country comparisons
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny