ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

The GRoceries Aimed at Increasing Nutrition Study (GRAINS)

University of Pennsylvania logo

University of Pennsylvania

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Type 2 Diabetes (T2DM)
Type II Diabetes Mellitus
Type II Diabetes
Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus
Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM)
Pre-diabetic State
Pre-diabetes
Type 2 Diabetes
Pre-diabetic

Treatments

Behavioral: Marketing Nudges + Dynamically Adapted Financial Incentives
Behavioral: Marketing Nudges Only

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT07167004
858072
2P30AG034546 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Only 2% of Americans meet the recommended levels of whole grain consumption, despite its association with reduced risk of type 2 diabetes. This study aims to assess if consumers with prediabetes or type 2 diabetes can be encouraged to switch from buying refined grain products to whole grain products when shopping for groceries online. The study will use personalized marketing strategies, with or without discounts which adjust based on purchasing behavior, to promote whole grain consumption.

Full description

The overall objective of this study is to determine if behaviorally informed marketing strategies or those same strategies plus dynamically adapted financial incentives can prompt consumers with prediabetes or diabetes to switch from refined to whole grain products when grocery shopping online. The specific aims of the study are:

Aim 1: To demonstrate the feasibility of conducting a randomized controlled trial (RCT) via an online grocery delivery platform and to refine mechanism-based marketing nudges and incentives based on user insights. The overall objective of this aim is to customize the online grocery store experience to align with the needs of the consumers while also supporting the objectives of the two intervention arms outlined in Aim 2. Customizations will include displaying whole grains (e.g., whole wheat bread, brown rice) at the top of the study's online grocery store, featuring whole grain banner displays, and offering product swaps to highlight whole grain alternatives. Additionally, the study team will ensure that all refined grain items have corresponding whole grain options, to the extent possible. To evaluate the platform's usability and gather insights for refining the interventions, the study team will recruit 9 participants to test the customized online grocery store. Participants will provide feedback on the online shopping environment and whole grain options in an end-of-study survey. This feedback will be used to refine the marketing nudge interventions for Aim 2.

Aim 2: To test whether behaviorally informed marketing strategies or those same strategies plus dynamically adapted financial incentives can prompt consumers with prediabetes or diabetes to switch from buying refined grain products to whole grain products when grocery shopping online. Enrolled participants will be randomized to one of three intervention arms: 1) control (no intervention), 2) marketing nudges, or 3) marketing nudges + dynamically adapted financial incentives. Participants will select groceries from the study's online grocery store, and the orders will be delivered to their homes via a third-party delivery service. The first two weeks will serve as a baseline period for data collection. Starting in Week 3, participants in intervention arms 2 and 3 will be exposed to marketing nudges promoting whole grains for 8 weeks. Participants in the third intervention arm will additionally receive personalized financial incentives with individual incentive amounts optimized weekly based on prior whole grain purchasing behavior and engagement. In a typical healthy eating incentive study, all participants would get the same incentive amount each week. An innovative aspect of this study is to dynamically adapt the incentive, so each person experiences a personalized offering of incentives each week based on their whole grain shopping habits in prior weeks. This means participants who did not buy a whole grain item in response to a smaller incentive in a prior week may receive a larger incentive than participants who did purchase whole grains when offered the smaller incentive. This will not be gameable since it will not be apparent to participants a priori. This approach enables us to mimic current retailer practices, rather than more outdated strategies that provide the same incentive weekly.

Aim 3: To examine whether whole grain purchasing behaviors have become habitual and persist after the marketing nudges and dynamically adapted financial incentives cease. The overall objective of this aim is to explore the potential for marketing strategies and dynamically adapted financial incentives to create lasting changes in grocery shopping habits, specifically by examining whether participants continue purchasing whole grain products once the intervention has ended. Participants will be followed for an additional 8 weeks post-intervention to track their online grocery shopping behavior in the absence of the marketing nudges and financial incentives. During this period, participants will continue to shop through the study's online grocery store and have their groceries delivered to them through a third-party delivery service. In addition, for the first 4 weeks of follow-up, they will continue to receive their weekly $10 incentive if they shop in the study's online grocery store. At the conclusion of the study, participants will receive a $25 incentive for completing a survey assessing the intervention's salience, their acceptance of whole grains, and any remaining barriers to switching to whole grains.

Enrollment

216 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

45 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age 45 - 70 years.
  • Able to provide consent.
  • Resident of Philadelphia, Bucks, Delaware, Chester, or Montgomery Counties in Pennsylvania.
  • Consume <5 servings of whole grains per week.
  • Use online grocery shopping at least once per month.
  • Have access to a credit or debit card to pay for groceries purchased.
  • Have reliable internet access.
  • Speak English.
  • Penn Medicine patient diagnosed with prediabetes or diabetes (identified using ICD-10 codes R73.03, E11).

Exclusion criteria

  • Does not meet all the inclusion criteria.
  • Not able to speak English.
  • Not able to provide consent.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

216 participants in 3 patient groups

Control
No Intervention group
Description:
Completion of weekly grocery shopping in a version of the study store without any interventions (i.e., without marketing nudges and financial incentives)
Marketing Nudges Only
Experimental group
Description:
Marketing nudges encouraging whole grain purchasing, including displaying whole grains (e.g., whole wheat bread, brown rice) at the top of the study's online grocery store, featuring whole grain banner displays, and offering product swaps to highlight whole grain alternatives
Treatment:
Behavioral: Marketing Nudges Only
Marketing Nudges + Dynamically Adapted Financial Incentives
Experimental group
Description:
Marketing nudges encouraging whole grain purchasing, including displaying whole grains (e.g., whole wheat bread, brown rice) at the top of the study's online grocery store, featuring whole grain banner displays, and offering product swaps to highlight whole grain alternatives, plus personalized financial incentives with individual incentive amounts optimized weekly based on prior whole grain purchasing behavior and engagement
Treatment:
Behavioral: Marketing Nudges + Dynamically Adapted Financial Incentives

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Central trial contact

Julianna Catania, MPH; Emily Dzieniszewski, MPH

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems