Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

This study aims to systematically evaluate the effect of Singapore's new front-of-pack non-alcoholic beverage labels, called Nutri-Grade, on the consumption of processed beverages. Using a fully functional grocery webstore, the investigators wish to assess the causal effect of the new labels on food and beverage purchase, sugar intake, and overall diet quality and examine how this effect varies by shoppers' income and education level. The investigators' hypotheses about the effects of these new food labels, measured by the grams of sugar per serving (primary) of finalized shopping baskets, are as follows: 1. Hypotheses 1: The new sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) labels will shift consumers toward healthier products. Sugar-sweetened beverages are any liquids that have been sweetened with one or more of the different forms of added sugars. 2. Hypotheses 2: The new SSB labels will reduce overall sugar and calories purchased and increase overall diet quality. 3. Hypotheses 3: Effects will be greater for those with low income/low education as they are least familiar with the nutrition facts panel and thus most likely to benefit from the new information.


Clinical Trial Description

1. Experimental Design and Procedures The aim of this study is to use a 2 x 2 within-subject crossover design with an online grocery store, to systematically evaluate the effect of the new SSB front-of-pack labels, Nutri-Grade, on diet quality and examine how this effect varies by shoppers' income and education level. To this end, the investigators will be using two different versions of an online experimental grocery store called NUSMart, designed for research purposes. The two versions are described below. 2. Overview of Experimental Design The investigators will recruit Singapore residents aged 21 years or older. Prospective participants will be asked to complete an online screener to determine their eligibility to participate in the study. Those who do not consent or are deemed ineligible will be notified of their ineligibility with an on-screen message. If interested and eligible, the applicant will then be asked to complete a registration form containing name, mobile number, and email address. Contact information for the Duke-NUS study team will be provided to allow questions to be asked at any point in the consent process and throughout the study. Upon completion of the registration form, NUSMart will create the participant account and a unique ID number (CID) for use throughout the study. Participants will receive an automated email with their unique login details. Participants will be directed to read the Participant Information Sheet and provide consent. The investigators will provide information on study protocols and participation details without disclosing the intervention arms explicitly, to maintain the integrity of participant responses and hence to ensure validity of results. It will be deleterious to the study to reveal the labels or the differences between study arms before participants complete both shops as this will likely confound participant responses. The consent form will state that in each of the shops there is a 50% chance that the participant will have to make actual purchases i.e. buy the groceries in the cart they checked out. In reality, it will be randomly decided earlier whether shopping trip 1 or 2 is the real shop. This will be achieved via a collaboration with a local online grocery provider, FairPrice. After obtaining consent, participants will be asked to fill in a baseline survey to collect demographic and health characteristics. The baseline questionnaire includes a question as to whether any household members have a medical condition, such as diabetes or hypertension, which requires limiting the types of foods they eat. Eligible participants who have completed to this point will enter a participant waiting list, where the study team will manually enroll the participant as active according to the capacity of the study team. Once participants have successfully enrolled in the study they will be informed by email, and are expected to complete two grocery shops (one shop per week) on NUSMart. Participants are expected to complete one shop in one sitting. The investigators will apply a within person design and randomize the order of the two shops. Participants will receive email and text reminders each week to complete their order. Each participant will be told that they must buy at least one beverage product and that they will make the payment using their credit card & receive their grocery orders. This real-shopping experiment ensures the credibility of the results. Each participant will therefore shop a total of 2 times during the study. This will include 1 shop within each shopping condition (Arm 1 and Arm 2). During the study, participants will be asked to purchase their weekly groceries the amount of which is similar to their typical grocery shopping for their households, with a specified minimum spend at each shop. A wheel of purchase will be used to determine which one of the 2 shops will the participant actually pay for and receive ordered goods for. Upon completion of their second shop, participants will be asked to fill in a short post-study survey asking for their feedback on the interventions. Participants who successfully complete both shops and all other surveys will be considered as having completed the study. Participants will be provided with the debriefing sheet via email after study completion. For the participants who wish to withdraw midway into the study, the debriefing sheet will be sent to them as soon as possible after they withdraw. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05018026
Study type Interventional
Source Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date September 1, 2021
Completion date January 31, 2022

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT05049005 - Alternative Dietary Approaches Online to Promote Tracking N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05457439 - Sustainable-psycho-nutritional Intervention Program and Its Effects on Health Outcomes and the Environment N/A
Completed NCT05007184 - Understanding Food Choices in Saudi Arabia N/A
Completed NCT03394326 - Eat Healthy for Families N/A
Completed NCT05537337 - Understanding Food Choices (Aim 2) N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT06266468 - Nutricity: An mHealth Nutrition Intervention to Improve Diet Quality Among Latino Children N/A
Recruiting NCT04762251 - What Or When to Eat to Reduce the Risk of Type 2 Diabetes (WOW) N/A
Completed NCT04632212 - Understanding Food Choices N/A
Recruiting NCT04994938 - Peer-Led Diet and Exercise Intervention N/A
Completed NCT05070442 - Diet Improvement Through Normative Experimentation N/A