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Real-world nudging, pricing, and mobile physical activity coaching was insufficient to improve lifestyle behaviours and cardiometabolic health: the Supreme Nudge parallel cluster-randomised controlled supermarket trial
by
van der Schouw, Yvonne T.
, Lakerveld, Jeroen
, Stuber, Josine M.
, Hoenink, Jody C.
, Mackenbach, Joreintje D.
, de Bruijn, Gert-Jan
, Velema, Elizabeth
, Vos, Anne L.
, Gillebaart, Marleen
, Middel, Cédric N. H.
, Waterlander, Wilma E.
, de Ridder, Denise T. D.
, Beulens, Joline W. J.
, Smit, Edith G.
in
Behavior
/ Biomedicine
/ Cardiovascular disease
/ Cardiovascular diseases
/ Cardiovascular Diseases - epidemiology
/ Cardiovascular Diseases - prevention & control
/ Care and treatment
/ Choice architecture
/ Clusters
/ Coaching
/ Customer satisfaction
/ Diagnosis
/ Diet
/ Dietary guidelines
/ Economic aspects
/ Evaluation
/ Exercise
/ Female
/ Food
/ Food environment
/ Food environments and health
/ Food habits
/ Food intake
/ Food quality
/ Glycosylated hemoglobin
/ Grocery store
/ Health aspects
/ Health promotion
/ Health risks
/ Humans
/ Intervention
/ Life Style
/ Lifestyles
/ Lipids
/ Loyalty cards
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mentoring
/ Metabolic diseases
/ Middle Aged
/ Nutrient deficiency
/ Obesity
/ Physical activity
/ Physical fitness
/ Prevention
/ Pricing
/ Purchasing
/ Questionnaires
/ Research Article
/ Risk
/ Risk factors
/ Risk taking
/ Sales
/ Smartphones
/ Statistical analysis
/ Supermarkets
/ Time measurement
/ Type 2 diabetes
/ Walking
2024
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Real-world nudging, pricing, and mobile physical activity coaching was insufficient to improve lifestyle behaviours and cardiometabolic health: the Supreme Nudge parallel cluster-randomised controlled supermarket trial
by
van der Schouw, Yvonne T.
, Lakerveld, Jeroen
, Stuber, Josine M.
, Hoenink, Jody C.
, Mackenbach, Joreintje D.
, de Bruijn, Gert-Jan
, Velema, Elizabeth
, Vos, Anne L.
, Gillebaart, Marleen
, Middel, Cédric N. H.
, Waterlander, Wilma E.
, de Ridder, Denise T. D.
, Beulens, Joline W. J.
, Smit, Edith G.
in
Behavior
/ Biomedicine
/ Cardiovascular disease
/ Cardiovascular diseases
/ Cardiovascular Diseases - epidemiology
/ Cardiovascular Diseases - prevention & control
/ Care and treatment
/ Choice architecture
/ Clusters
/ Coaching
/ Customer satisfaction
/ Diagnosis
/ Diet
/ Dietary guidelines
/ Economic aspects
/ Evaluation
/ Exercise
/ Female
/ Food
/ Food environment
/ Food environments and health
/ Food habits
/ Food intake
/ Food quality
/ Glycosylated hemoglobin
/ Grocery store
/ Health aspects
/ Health promotion
/ Health risks
/ Humans
/ Intervention
/ Life Style
/ Lifestyles
/ Lipids
/ Loyalty cards
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mentoring
/ Metabolic diseases
/ Middle Aged
/ Nutrient deficiency
/ Obesity
/ Physical activity
/ Physical fitness
/ Prevention
/ Pricing
/ Purchasing
/ Questionnaires
/ Research Article
/ Risk
/ Risk factors
/ Risk taking
/ Sales
/ Smartphones
/ Statistical analysis
/ Supermarkets
/ Time measurement
/ Type 2 diabetes
/ Walking
2024
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Real-world nudging, pricing, and mobile physical activity coaching was insufficient to improve lifestyle behaviours and cardiometabolic health: the Supreme Nudge parallel cluster-randomised controlled supermarket trial
by
van der Schouw, Yvonne T.
, Lakerveld, Jeroen
, Stuber, Josine M.
, Hoenink, Jody C.
, Mackenbach, Joreintje D.
, de Bruijn, Gert-Jan
, Velema, Elizabeth
, Vos, Anne L.
, Gillebaart, Marleen
, Middel, Cédric N. H.
, Waterlander, Wilma E.
, de Ridder, Denise T. D.
, Beulens, Joline W. J.
, Smit, Edith G.
in
Behavior
/ Biomedicine
/ Cardiovascular disease
/ Cardiovascular diseases
/ Cardiovascular Diseases - epidemiology
/ Cardiovascular Diseases - prevention & control
/ Care and treatment
/ Choice architecture
/ Clusters
/ Coaching
/ Customer satisfaction
/ Diagnosis
/ Diet
/ Dietary guidelines
/ Economic aspects
/ Evaluation
/ Exercise
/ Female
/ Food
/ Food environment
/ Food environments and health
/ Food habits
/ Food intake
/ Food quality
/ Glycosylated hemoglobin
/ Grocery store
/ Health aspects
/ Health promotion
/ Health risks
/ Humans
/ Intervention
/ Life Style
/ Lifestyles
/ Lipids
/ Loyalty cards
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mentoring
/ Metabolic diseases
/ Middle Aged
/ Nutrient deficiency
/ Obesity
/ Physical activity
/ Physical fitness
/ Prevention
/ Pricing
/ Purchasing
/ Questionnaires
/ Research Article
/ Risk
/ Risk factors
/ Risk taking
/ Sales
/ Smartphones
/ Statistical analysis
/ Supermarkets
/ Time measurement
/ Type 2 diabetes
/ Walking
2024
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Real-world nudging, pricing, and mobile physical activity coaching was insufficient to improve lifestyle behaviours and cardiometabolic health: the Supreme Nudge parallel cluster-randomised controlled supermarket trial
Journal Article
Real-world nudging, pricing, and mobile physical activity coaching was insufficient to improve lifestyle behaviours and cardiometabolic health: the Supreme Nudge parallel cluster-randomised controlled supermarket trial
2024
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Overview
Background
Context-specific interventions may contribute to sustained behaviour change and improved health outcomes. We evaluated the real-world effects of supermarket nudging and pricing strategies and mobile physical activity coaching on diet quality, food-purchasing behaviour, walking behaviour, and cardiometabolic risk markers.
Methods
This parallel cluster-randomised controlled trial included supermarkets in socially disadvantaged neighbourhoods across the Netherlands with regular shoppers aged 30–80 years. Supermarkets were randomised to receive co-created nudging and pricing strategies promoting healthier purchasing (
N
= 6) or not (
N
= 6). Nudges targeted 9% of supermarket products and pricing strategies 3%. Subsequently, participants were individually randomised to a control (step counter app) or intervention arm (step counter and mobile coaching app) to promote walking. The primary outcome was the average change in diet quality (low (0) to high (150)) over all follow-up time points measured with a validated 40-item food frequency questionnaire at baseline and 3, 6, and 12 months. Secondary outcomes included healthier food purchasing (loyalty card-derived), daily step count (step counter app), cardiometabolic risk markers (lipid profile and HbA1c via finger prick, and waist circumference via measuring tape), and supermarket customer satisfaction (questionnaire-based: very unsatisfied (1) to very satisfied (7)), evaluated using linear mixed-models. Healthy supermarket sales (an exploratory outcome) were analysed via controlled interrupted time series analyses.
Results
Of 361 participants (162 intervention, 199 control), 73% were female, the average age was 58 (SD 11) years, and 42% were highly educated. Compared to the control arm, the intervention arm showed no statistically significant average changes over time in diet quality (
β −
1.1 (95% CI − 3.8 to 1.7)), percentage healthy purchasing (
β
0.7 ( − 2.7 to 4.0)), step count (
β −
124.0 (− 723.1 to 475.1), or any of the cardiometabolic risk markers. Participants in the intervention arm scored 0.3 points (0.1 to 0.5) higher on customer satisfaction on average over time. Supermarket-level sales were unaffected (
β
− 0.0 (− 0.0 to 0.0)).
Conclusions
Co-created nudging and pricing strategies that predominantly targeted healthy products via nudges were unable to increase healthier food purchases and intake nor improve cardiometabolic health. The mobile coaching intervention did not affect step count. Governmental policy measures are needed to ensure more impactful supermarket modifications that promote healthier purchases.
Trial registration
Dutch Trial Register ID NL7064, 30 May 2018,
https://www.onderzoekmetmensen.nl/en/trial/20990
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
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