Affiliation:
1. Department of Nutrition and the Nutrition in Foodservice Research Centre (NUPPRE) of the Federal University of Santa Catarina Florianópolis Santa Catarina Brazil
2. Department of Nutrition, NUPPRE, and the Nutrition Postgraduate Program of the Federal University of Santa Catarina Florianópolis Santa Catarina Brazil
3. NUPPRE and the Catholic University Centre of Santa Catarina Joinville Santa Catarina Brazil
4. NUPPRE and the Nutrition Postgraduate Program of the Federal University of Santa Catarina Florianópolis Santa Catarina Brazil
Abstract
AbstractQualitative menu labelling can be defined as descriptive or non‐numerical interpretive labels (e.g. traffic light labelling, healthy food symbols, messages or ingredient lists). Qualitative information seems to have a positive influence on consumers' food choices, particularly in institutional food service establishments, such as in universities. The aim of this systematic review was to assess the influence of different formats of qualitative menu labelling on food choices in university restaurants. This systematic review was guided by the Preferred Reported Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta‐Analyses (PRISMA) and Synthesis Without Meta‐Analysis (SWiM) and conducted vote counting of studies based on the direction of effect. Studies were retrieved from Cochrane Library, Scopus, MEDLINE, LILACS, SciELO and Web of Science databases and reference lists of selected articles. Experimental and quasi‐experimental studies were included. Two independent researchers searched and extracted the data and assessed the methodological quality using the Effective Public Health Practice Project (EPHPP) Quality Assessment Tool for Quantitative Studies. From the initial search (460 records), four papers were selected, plus one paper identified in a previous study and a further six from an update search, totalling 11 included studies, reporting 14 different interventions (n = 499 174). Types of interventions included the use of symbols and the inclusion of traffic light labelling. Outcomes of interest were food choice, expressed as mean, median or percent healthy food choices or purchases. Qualitative menu labels increased healthy food choices and/or purchase behaviour, with 10 of 12 interventions favouring the intervention (83%; 95%CI 55–95%; p = 0.0386). Most of the studies favouring the intervention used healthy food symbols for healthier foods or food components, alone or in association with another intervention and were of moderate and weak quality. These findings may serve as a basis for the implementation of nutrition information policies in university restaurants.
Funder
Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico
Subject
Nutrition and Dietetics,Medicine (miscellaneous)
Cited by
2 articles.
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