Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

There is a lot of confusion when it comes to understanding nutrition information on food packages, thus making it difficult for consumers to choose healthy products. In today's busy and fast-paced shopping environment, mobile digital technology (for example, Smartphone applications) can help consumers make 'healthier' food choices when they are shopping. This study aims to test the effectiveness of a traffic light front-of-pack system, the Health Star Rating System (HSR or Star System), and the proposed sodium, saturated fat and sugar warning labels proposed by Health Canada. The study will also experimentally test the use of a Smartphone application (app), FoodFlip, to help educate consumers on these systems on food packages to explore the impact of a learning effect on the efficacy of the labelling systems.


Clinical Trial Description

The rising rate of obesity and diet-related chronic diseases illustrate that Canadians' eating habits need to change. Equipping Canadians with information and tools to enable healthy food choices that decrease risk for disease is imperative. While the Nutrition Facts table (NFt) is the most standardized and complete form of nutrition labelling, studies have shown that consumers are confused about serving size, nutrient quantities, and the interpretation of the % Daily Value. Thus, expert groups have proposed the introduction of interpretive front-of-pack (FOP) nutrition rating systems (e.g. traffic light labelling or star ratings) that also help consumers understand the significance of the levels of nutrients in relation to the "healthiness" of a food. One of the main barriers to the introduction of such a system is the absence of high quality studies that objectively measure the impact of nutrition information on actual food purchases. This is a consequence of both the practical challenges associated with designing and conducting such studies in 'real-world' settings, and the lack of food industry support to quantitatively examine or publish the potential for enhanced nutrition labels to modify consumer food choices. With the growing burden of diet-related disease, there is an urgent need for robust evidence to evaluate the potential for additional interpretive nutrition labelling systems to modify and improve food purchasing patterns. Given the relative ubiquity of mobile digital technologies, our Canadian Smartphone application (FoodFLIP) provides us with an unprecedented opportunity to examine and improve consumers' diets. This study will investigate whether a traffic light, a health star rating or a high-in warning label FOP system can help consumers identify and purchase healthier foods. Objective 1: To evaluate the effects of three FOP systems in helping consumers characterize healthfulness and nutritional content of food items. Objective 2: To determine which of the three FOP systems support healthier food choices and are preferred by Canadian consumers. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02814604
Study type Interventional
Source University of Toronto
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date November 1, 2018
Completion date January 30, 2020

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Active, not recruiting NCT06059404 - Tailoring OT and RD Services for Home-delivered Meal Clients Phase 1
Recruiting NCT03335644 - The NutriNet-Santé Study
Completed NCT02773069 - The Church as a Bridge to Deliver Health Resources Via Telehealth N/A
Recruiting NCT04932785 - Regular vs. Clear Liquid Diet for Mild to Moderate Acute Pancreatitis N/A
Completed NCT04025060 - Reducing Sugar-sweetened Beverage Consumption Among Children N/A
Recruiting NCT05311436 - Nutri-CAP: Nutrition for Children, Adolescent Girls, and Pregnant Women in Slums of Dhaka City N/A
Withdrawn NCT05074108 - Mitigating and Preventing Disordered Eating in Transitioning Service Members N/A
Completed NCT05932771 - Resistance Exercise and Hydrolyzed Collagen Supplementation N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05747066 - Nutrition in People With a Lower Limb Amputation
Completed NCT05605483 - Salad Bars in the National School Lunch Program: Impact on Dietary Consumption Patterns in Elementary School Students
Completed NCT03248115 - Bioavailability of Green Tea and Coffee Polyphenols N/A
Completed NCT02800564 - Change in Child-feeding Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices With Nutrition Education Mass Media in Ghana N/A