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Evaluating a Healthy Restaurant Kids Meals Policy

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health logo

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Status

Completed

Conditions

Diet Habit

Treatments

Other: Healthy Default Kids' Beverage Policy

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT04330235
1R01HD100983-01 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
HDB-NYC

Details and patient eligibility

About

More than a dozen municipalities have passed healthy default kids' beverage policies. These policies seek to reduce child consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) by requiring that restaurants serve only healthy beverages (e.g., water, milk, or 100% juice) instead of SSBs as the default choice with children's meals in restaurants. These policies have potential to meaningfully reduce child SSB consumption. However, there are significant gaps in our knowledge of the effects of healthy default beverage policies on children's health. This study uses a natural experiment to evaluate the effects of a healthy default beverage policy in two U.S. cities, New York City and Philadelphia, on children's fast-food restaurant meal orders and dietary intake. The primary hypothesis is that the policy will reduce children's SSB purchases and consumption, reduce children's total caloric intake, and improve diet quality at the fast-food restaurant meal and on the day of the restaurant meal.

Full description

This study uses a quasi-experimental approach to evaluate the effects of a healthy default kids' beverage policy on children's fast-food restaurant meal purchases and dietary intake. Annotated receipt and survey data will be collected from parents purchasing a food or beverage for a child 2-10 years of age at fast-food restaurants. Eligible participants will be asked to participate in a telephone dietary recall the following day. Data will be collected from a repeated cross-section of children in two intervention cities implementing a healthy default kids' beverage policy (New York City and Philadelphia) and a control area not implementing the policy (northern New Jersey) before the policy is implemented and after the policy goes into effect. A difference-in-differences analytic approach will be used to compare the change in children's fast-food restaurant meal orders and dietary intake pre- to post-implementation in the intervention versus control groups. A Holm-Bonferroni correction for multiple comparisons will be applied to p-values for secondary outcomes.

Enrollment

3,480 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Adult 18 years of age or older
  • Parent or legal guardian of a child 2-10 years of age
  • Purchasing at least one food or beverage item for the child at the restaurant (if purchasing foods or beverages for multiple children, only items purchased for the youngest child 2-10 years of age will be included)
  • Able to speak and understand English or Spanish

Additional criteria for dietary recalls:

  • Parent or legal guardian 18 years of age or older is present for the recall
  • If child for whom the restaurant meal was purchased is 6 years of age or older, child is present for the recall
  • If child for whom the restaurant meal was purchased is 9 years of age or older, the child is present for the recall and is able to speak and understand English or Spanish

Exclusion criteria

  • Younger than 18 years of age
  • Is not a parent or legal guardian to a child 2-10 years of age
  • Is not purchasing one or more food or beverage items for the child at the restaurant
  • Does not speak or understand English or Spanish

Additional criteria for dietary recalls:

  • Parent or legal guardian is not present for the recall
  • The restaurant meal was purchased for a child 6 years of age or older, who is not present for the recall
  • Child 9 years of age or older, for whom the restaurant meal was purchased, is not able to speak or understand English or Spanish

Trial design

3,480 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention Group
Description:
Children 2-10 years of age dining at fast-food restaurants in New York City and Philadelphia, where a healthy default beverage policy will be enacted.
Treatment:
Other: Healthy Default Kids' Beverage Policy
Control Group
Description:
Children 2-10 years of age dining at fast-food restaurants in northern New Jersey, where a healthy default beverage policy will not be enacted.

Trial contacts and locations

3

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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