Pricing Strategies to Encourage Availability, Purchase, and Consumption of Healthy Foods and Beverages: A Systematic Review
SYSTEMATIC REVIEW — Volume 14 — November 2, 2017
Joel Gittelsohn, PhD1; Angela Cristina Bizzotto Trude, MS1; Hyunju Kim, MPH1 (View author affiliations)
Suggested citation for this article: Gittelsohn J, Trude ACB, Kim H. Pricing Strategies to Encourage Availability, Purchase, and Consumption of Healthy Foods and Beverages: A Systematic Review. Prev Chronic Dis 2017;14:170213. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5888/pcd14.170213.
PEER REVIEWED
Abstract
Introduction
Food pricing policies to promote healthy diets, such as taxes, price manipulations, and food subsidies, have been tested in different settings. However, little consensus exists about the effect of these policies on the availability of healthy and unhealthy foods, on what foods consumers buy, or on the impact of food purchases on consumer health outcomes. We conducted a systematic review of studies of the effect of food-pricing interventions on retail sales and on consumer purchasing and consumption of healthy foods and beverages.
Methods
We used MEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, Web of Science, ClinicalTrials.gov, and the Cochrane Library to conduct a systematic search for peer-reviewed articles related to studies of food pricing policies. We selected articles that were published in English from January 2000 through December 2016 on the following types of studies: 1) real-world experimental studies (randomized controlled trials, quasi-experimental studies, and natural experiments); 2) population studies of people or retail stores in middle-income and high-income countries; 3) pricing interventions alone or in combination with other strategies (price promotions, coupons, taxes, or cash-back rebates), excluding studies of vending-machine or online sales; and 4) outcomes studies at the retail (stocking, sales) and consumer (purchasing, consumption) levels. We selected 65 articles representing 30 studies for review.
Results
Sixteen pricing intervention studies that sought to improve access to healthy food and beverage options reported increased stocking and sales of promoted food items. Most studies (n = 23) reported improvement in the purchasing and consumption of healthy foods or beverages or decreased purchasing and consumption of unhealthy foods or beverages. Most studies assessed promotions of fresh fruits and vegetables (n = 20); however, these foods may be hard to source, have high perishability, and raise concerns about safety and handling. Few of the pricing studies we reviewed discouraged purchasing and consumption of unhealthy foods (n = 6). Many studies we reviewed had limitations, including lack of formative research, process evaluation, or psychosocial and health assessments of the intervention’s impact; short intervention duration; or no assessment of food substitutions or the effects of pricing interventions on food purchasing and diets.
Conclusion
Pricing interventions generally increased stocking, sales, purchasing, and consumption of promoted foods and beverages. Additional studies are needed to differentiate the potential impact of selected pricing strategies and policies over others.
Introduction
Pricing strategies to encourage the availability, purchasing, and consumption of healthy foods and beverages have received increased attention in the past decade, in the United States and worldwide. Various pricing strategies have been studied in different settings, including taxes and price manipulations of sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs), high calorie–low nutrient foods or foods high in added sugars or saturated fats, and subsidies of fruits and vegetables. Despite these studies, little consensus exists about the effectiveness of these pricing strategies in changing the availability and affordability of healthy and unhealthy foods or their effect on consumer outcomes (ie, foods purchased, foods consumed, and health). Furthermore, little consensus exists about how pricing strategies function, alone or combined with health behavior interventions or as part of multi-level interventions.
Reviews were conducted previously on related topics. Nine recent reviews (from 2010 through 2015) examined the effect of taxes, subsidies, or their pooled effect on food consumption, consumer purchases, body weight, or diet-related chronic diseases (1–9). However, many of these reviews described laboratory-based or simulation studies (6–8). Only one systematic review described field intervention studies (9) and focused on subsidies to increase purchasing of healthy foods. Few focused on implementation and outcomes of pricing interventions at both the supply (retail) and demand (consumer) levels in actual communities.
Decision makers need a systematic review of the effectiveness of pricing incentives and disincentive strategies on availability, purchasing, and consumption of healthy and unhealthy foods and beverages at the consumer and retail levels. Therefore, our goal was to answer the following questions: 1) How do pricing incentives and disincentives influence access, purchasing, and consumption of healthy and unhealthy foods and beverages among various populations in high-income and middle-income countries? 2) What additional work is needed to enable communities, states, and countries to identify the best combination of strategies?
Methods
Data sources
We conducted a systematic review of English-language, peer-reviewed articles describing studies that evaluated the effectiveness of pricing incentives and disincentive strategies on purchasing and consumption of healthy and unhealthy foods and beverages in high-income and middle-income countries in various socioeconomic settings. We searched 6 electronic databases — MEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, Web of Science, ClinicalTrials.gov, and the Cochrane Library — from January 2000 through December 2016 for relevant studies.
We developed a search strategy based on medical subject heading (MeSH) terms and based on the text and key words of key articles we identified a priori (Appendix). We used Boolean operators to combine keywords and MeSH terms for a focused search. We developed 3 topics based on our research question (incentive/disincentive, food intake, and food purchasing), and we then included key words and MeSH terms representing each term. Search terms were pricing strategies, incentive, reimbursement, commerce, disincentive, reward, taxes, monetary incentive, consumer behavior, marketing, cost savings, food purchasing, food supply, dietary intake, eating behavior, food intake, food and beverages, and snacks.
Study selection
We selected the following types of human studies published in English in peer-reviewed journals, from 2000 through 2016: 1) experimental studies (randomized controlled trials, quasi-experimental studies, and natural experiments, excluding reviews and cross-sectional, qualitative, and simulation models studies); 2) population studies of people or stores in middle-income and high-income countries; 3) studies of pricing interventions conducted alone or in combination with other strategies (price promotions, coupons, taxes, or cash-back rebates), excluding studies of vending-machine or online sales; and 4) outcomes studied at the retail (stocking, sales) or consumer (purchasing, consumption) levels. Additional criteria were that study outcomes were assessed at the retail level (stocking, sales) or consumer level (purchasing, consumption) and that the study was not an evaluation of a government program in schools (eg, a school-based food assistance program).
Two reviewers (A.C.B.T., H.K.) reviewed abstracts and full articles independently to assess eligibility for inclusion. H.K. confirmed or corrected A.C.B.T.’s data abstractions for completeness and accuracy. We also conducted a reference list search on the studies we selected for review and identified 5 eligible studies. Lastly, we identified all peer-reviewed publications associated with each study and cited only those that contributed to this review.
Data extraction
For the synthesis, we employed an adjudication approach. We used a series of descriptive criteria to characterize each study: project name, target population, model or theory, study goal, foods and beverages that were the intervention’s focus and its retail venue, sample size, intervention strategies, study design, study duration, formative research, feasibility assessment, process evaluation, impact measures and results, sustainability, quality of research, study limitations, and study recommendations (Appendix Table 1). Two reviewers (A.C.B.T., H.K.) analyzed each study independently and provided a long and a short response for the descriptive criteria. A third reviewer (J.G.) reviewed the descriptions and agreed or disagreed to the study’s inclusion. Where there was disagreement, the third reviewer broke the tie.
We organized data into the following categories: 1) a description of each study; 2) a description of the intervention, pricing strategies, and the study evaluation; and 3) main results and study implications. Data were then grouped by type of pricing intervention categories: 1) financial discount on healthy foods and beverages, 2) redeemable coupons or vouchers for healthy foods and beverages targeting participants in food assistance programs, 3) redeemable coupons or vouchers for healthy foods and beverages targeting consumers not participating in food assistance programs, 4) cash rebates, and 5) disincentive strategies for unhealthy food and beverage purchases (eg, tax, alone or combined with a strategy promoting healthy foods).
Results
Searches returned 2,076 articles, and 1,677 were screened after excluding duplicates (ie, the same article in different research databases) and by refining the searches by year, language, and species. After elimination of 1,625 for not meeting our study criteria, 52 were fully assessed for eligibility; 27 were excluded and 5 were included after a reference list search. Thus, 30 distinct studies in 63 articles were included in the final analysis (Figure). The number of peer-reviewed publications per study varied from 1 to 7, with a median of 2 per study.
Figure.
Selection process, systematic review of pricing strategies to encourage purchasing and consumption of healthy foods and beverages, 2000–2016. [A text version of this figure is also available.]
Description of studies
The 30 studies included in the review were conducted in 9 countries: the United States (n = 17), Australia (n = 2), New Zealand (n = 2), France (n = 2), Canada (n = 1), the United Kingdom (n = 1), South Africa (n = 1), Denmark (n = 1), Belgium (n = 1), Peru (n = 1), and Mexico (n = 1) (Table 1). The largest number of studies (n = 8) took place in the northeastern United States (Table 1). Most studies (n = 18) did not report the use of a theoretical model. Of the 12 that did, social cognitive theory was most commonly mentioned (n = 5), followed by the social ecological model (n = 5). The most common study design (n = 15) was a randomized controlled trial, with randomization either at the group or individual level.
At the consumer level, sample sizes ranged from 28 individual participants (What to Eat for Lunch study) to more than 50,000 households (Mexico excise tax study), with a median of 454 individuals sampled. Among the randomized controlled trials, the median sample size per study arm was 100 participants. The sample size or unit of randomization in some studies was based on clusters (eg, food stores) and not necessarily on individuals.
Almost all studies (n = 25) examined the impact of a pricing intervention alone or in combination with other strategies related to the stocking, sales, purchasing, or consumption of healthy foods. Most studies targeted low-income, disadvantaged populations (n = 18). Many studies (n = 12) targeted a specific population that was reached through the venue of the intervention (eg, a worksite, sports gym, school, swimming pool, hospital).
Interventions and strategies studied
Nearly all studies (n = 27) examined interventions that promoted healthy foods (Table 2). The most common types of foods promoted were fruits and vegetables (n = 20), particularly fresh produce, followed by low-sugar beverages (n = 10), and healthily prepared entrees and side dishes (n = 8). Only a few studies (n = 6) discouraged unhealthy foods, such as SSBs and foods high in saturated fat and sugar, as part of the intervention, generally by raising the prices of these foods.
The types of food sources targeted varied and included grocery stores and supermarkets (n = 7), all retailers in a setting (eg, city, neighborhood) (n = 6), farmers markets (n = 5), worksite cafeterias and school cafeterias (n = 5), food delivery services (n = 2), carryout restaurants (n = 1), corner stores (n = 1), and other types of retailers. The number of the food sources intervened in for each study also varied, from one to many thousands, because some studies implemented the strategy city-wide (median, 5 food source locations). Pricing interventions also differed between studies. Nine studies emphasized price discounts on healthy foods and beverages, ranging from 10% to 33%. Four studies provided coupons or vouchers of $5 to $20 to food assistance recipients. Six studies provided coupons or vouchers of $1 to $22 to the general population. In 5 studies, the pricing intervention was a cash rebate. The amount of the rebate took many different forms, such as a straight percentage off or a price reduction up to a certain limit. Six studies tested price increases on unhealthy foods, half of which included a price reduction on healthier foods. Three of these studies were of local or federal taxes, including taxes on SSBs.
Six of the 30 studies sought to change the availability of healthy or unhealthy foods. Only 2 of the studies changed the physical location of foods as a means of increasing their uptake by consumers. Eleven of the 30 studies implemented labeling to identify healthy versus unhealthy food choices. Most labeling approaches occurred in studies (n = 8) centered on the promotion of healthy foods and beverages. Five of the 30 studies used a policy approach, and 4 studies involved taxes at the city or national level.
Evaluation strategies
Most studies (n = 17) reported no formative research (Appendix Table 2). When formative research was conducted, it consisted of qualitative information gathering (n = 3), structured survey data collection (n = 4), or a pilot study (n = 6).
Most studies (n = 20) reported conducting a feasibility assessment, which consists of assessment of economic or cultural acceptability, operability, or perceived sustainability. However, feasibility assessment varied greatly among studies in terms of rigor and scope.
Process evaluation assesses how well an intervention was implemented according to the study plan and is usually assessed in terms of reach, dose delivered, and fidelity (75). Most studies (n = 18) reported no process evaluation. Two studies reported conducting extensive process evaluations that assessed reach, dose delivered, and fidelity (10,19).
Most studies (n = 20) assessed the impact of the intervention at the retail level (Table 2). Of these 20 studies, 15 collected data on sales of specific promoted foods. Other studies looked at changes in revenues, food availability, purchasing data, and changes in prices, although these measures were used in only 2 studies (36,40).
We examined impact assessment at the consumer level in 3 different domains: psychosocial, behavioral, and health outcomes. More than half (n = 17) of the studies reviewed included no consumer-level psychosocial assessment. Of those that did, measures used varied and included knowledge, self-efficacy, intentions for healthier behaviors, perceived healthfulness of the diet and affordability of healthy foods, perception of barriers to eating healthy, and food security.
Most studies (n = 24) described consumer-level behavioral assessment, most often measurements of food purchasing and consumption. Only 10 of the 30 studies reviewed measured any type of consumer-level health outcome. Most commonly, change in body mass index (BMI [kg/m2]) was assessed (7 studies), followed by blood work (4 studies).
Study results reported and study implications
We found little consistency in study results reported for feasibility and process measures (Appendix Table 2). Where reported, feasibility of pricing interventions was moderate to high. Pricing interventions were acceptable and generally were implemented as planned. In 1 study (21), the pricing intervention was not implemented at any site because of food managers’ concerns about profit loss. Where extensive process results were reported (2 studies), implementation quality was generally described as moderate (10,19).
Of the studies (n = 21) that measured an intervention’s impact at the retail level, the most common effects reported were increased sales of healthy foods (7 studies) (11,19,20,35,45,58,59, improved revenues or total profits (4 studies) (11,25,36,40), increased stocking of healthier foods (4 studies) (19,21,26,74, decreased sales of unhealthy foods (3 studies) (25,64,68), and increased sales of healthy foods as a ratio to unhealthy foods (2 studies) (10,55) (Table 3). All 16 studies that reported effects at the retail level found a positive impact on either stocking or sales. In summary, sales of units of healthy foods and beverages increased from 15% (19) to 1,000% (25), and sales of unhealthy foods and beverages decreased from 5% (64) to 47% (69). Stocking of healthy foods increased from 40% (19) to 63% (26) in response to pricing interventions (Table 3).
Only 13 studies reported any assessment of the impact of interventions on consumer psychosocial factors. Four studies found improved perceptions related to healthy eating (27,37,56,74). Three studies indicated that consumers improved their perception of healthfulness or availability of fruits and vegetables (36,45,60). Two studies found that consumers were more likely to shop at farmers markets (36,43).
Most (n = 23) studies assessed the impact of interventions on consumer behavior. Thirteen studies found increases in the consumption of healthy foods and beverages associated with the intervention (36–38,40,41,43,51,54,56,58,62,65,73), and 8 studies found increases in purchasing of healthy foods (10,26,27,31,35,53,54,59). Four studies found a reduction in the purchasing of unhealthy foods (52, 67, 71, 73). Four studies found a reduction in the consumption of unhealthy foods (55, 56, 64, 72). Two studies reported no effect on healthy food purchasing (44,45), and 1 found no impact on healthy beverage consumption (27). Overall, the pricing interventions, alone or in combination with other approaches, appeared to be successful in changing consumer behavior.
Although few studies (n = 8) assessed health-related outcomes at the consumer level, 5 found no impact on weight (20,22,26,41,58); 2 found no impact on various serum vitamin measures when comparing control and intervention groups over time (41,51).
Of the 14 studies that reported on sustainability of the intervention, 10 stated moderate to high sustainability through statewide or citywide implementation of the intervention (11,40), food policies that are still in progress (62,68), and continued interest of the participants (21,31,36,38,52,74).
The mean score for quality of research measures was 6.9 (standard deviation, 2.0), on a scale of 0 to 10 points (Table 3). Randomized controlled trials received higher scores than studies without a comparison group. Common study limitations included short intervention duration, possible biases in self-reporting, use of nonvalidated assessment tools, and lack of power and external validity of the findings.
Discussion
To our knowledge, this is the first systematic review to evaluate the effectiveness of pricing incentives and disincentive strategies on availability, purchasing, and consumption of healthy and unhealthy foods and beverages in various settings, including field intervention studies and natural experiments. The various pricing intervention strategies that sought to improve access to healthy food and beverage choices were successful. This result has been reported by other systematic reviews where subsidies on fruits and vegetables increased the purchasing and consumption of healthy foods (2,76,77). However, only one study evaluated the impact of fruit and vegetable subsidies from the perspective of retailers (74). Findings that the pricing interventions generally increased stocking and sales of promoted foods and beverages are encouraging. There is a need to consistently demonstrate these effects (particularly in terms of sales and revenues), to build support from food retailers and vendors. We recommend that additional studies be conducted to demonstrate beneficial effects of pricing interventions on sales, and especially on profits and total retail revenues.
Pricing intervention strategies appeared to positively affect consumer-level behavior, with most studies reporting increases in purchasing and consumption of healthy foods or beverages or decreased purchasing and consumption of unhealthy foods or beverages. We found no strong pattern to indicate that one type of pricing intervention worked better than another — all appeared to be effective. Additional studies and meta-analyses are needed to differentiate the potential impact of particular pricing interventions and policies over others. Only 2 studies changed the placement of foods in a store or market to make healthy choices more evident (26,35). This strategy can be effective, particularly when coupled with a pricing intervention and should be tested in future trials.
Most studies promoted fresh fruits and vegetables. However, these foods, especially for small retailers located in low-income settings, may be hard to source, have high perishability, and raise concerns about safety and handling (12,78). In addition, it is arguable that focusing on fresh fruits and vegetables alone is unlikely to make a substantial dent in diet-related chronic diseases (79). Pricing intervention trials should be broadened to include a range of healthy foods and beverages, including frozen, and even canned, foods.
Very few studies of food pricing interventions we reviewed discouraged unhealthy foods. Formative research has revealed that it is easier to convince food source owners to optimize the purchase of healthy foods than to get them to discourage the purchase of unhealthy foods (80,81). However, without some emphasis on decreasing consumer uptake of unhealthy foods and beverages, interventions that focus on healthy foods presume a substitution effect that may not exist. An exception to this concern are taxes on junk food and SSBs that have been adopted in recent years. Additional studies are needed in real community settings, testing both subsidies of healthy foods and beverages and increased prices of unhealthy foods and beverages.
Labeling foods that are part of pricing interventions appears to be a low-cost and effective way to draw attention to these foods. However, few studies reported labeling unhealthy foods. We need additional experimental trials in community food source settings that involve labeling both healthy and unhealthy foods and beverages.
Many of the studies we reviewed were small (ie, involved fewer than 50 respondents per treatment group), which raises concerns regarding enough statistical power to detect the true effect of the intervention. Future studies should be powered to find statistical differences between evaluation groups at the food source and consumer levels. Researchers can improve the transferability of their findings by disclosing how the sample size was determined.
Few studies included in the review attempted to assess the impact of pricing interventions on health outcomes. It may be unrealistic to hope to see the impact of policy and environmental interventions of this nature on health outcomes. However, natural experiments, given sufficient study duration, may be able to assess the impact of some of the large city-based policy initiatives, such as soda taxes. The average intervention duration was less than 1 year, and most lasted only a few months. Pricing intervention studies of longer duration are needed to track effects on health outcomes, and not just at the behavioral level.
The lack of formative research for most trials is of concern, especially in those studies that targeted specific populations. Even when formative research was conducted, it was minimal and not reported in any detail. Future pricing interventions should be based on solid formative research, and these findings should be reported in the published literature. Process evaluation of any form was rarely conducted in these studies. This is a major limitation of these studies, as it is of any intervention that neglects to collect process data (75). Failure to include process evaluation means that whether the failure of the intervention was because it was inherently flawed or because the intervention was not implemented as intended cannot be understood. Process evaluation data should be collected to assess implementation for all future pricing interventions. Several studies emphasized the importance of assessing the substitution effect (using savings from discounts to purchase other less healthy foods) and the compensation effect (purchasing more healthy foods but not reducing total energy intake) of pricing interventions on food purchases and dietary intakes (28,63,70). However, such assessment was not done in any of the studies reviewed and remains a major gap in this literature. Finally, a major gap in the studies reviewed is any type of uniform attention to consumer psychosocial outcomes. We recommend developing a core set of psychosocial measures for these types of intervention trials and recommend that they be based on theoretical frameworks.
This systematic review has several limitations. First, we focused exclusively on peer-reviewed literature. It is possible that additional, unpublished trials have been conducted. Second, some of the characteristics of specific trials that we marked as “not assessed” may have been assessed (eg, conducting formative research, process evaluation, cost-effectiveness) but were not published in peer-reviewed literature. This information may have been available in gray literature reports, on websites, or in other unexamined documents and thus were not included in this review. However, our use of only peer-reviewed literature helps to ensure a reasonable quality level of the research reported. Third, the use of only peer-reviewed literature may lead to publication bias, because studies with negative or null outcomes are less likely to be published. Fourth, our quality of study criteria did not include a measure of number of community venues for implementation sites. Nevertheless, we used these criteria to ensure comparability to previous studies (77). Finally, we did not conduct a meta-analysis to evaluate the pooled effectiveness of each pricing intervention strategy. Thus, the statement that one pricing strategy was no more effective than any other is based on the synthesis of the results and should be interpreted with caution. Because each pricing intervention strategy assessed different outcomes, it was challenging to compare the effect sizes of the studies and assess treatment effect. We included many studies outside the United States to enhance generalizability.
Pricing incentives and disincentive strategies to affect access, purchasing, and consumption of healthy and unhealthy foods and beverages in high-income and medium-income countries provide an evidence-based approach to improve healthy food access at the retail level and consumer purchasing and consumption (individual-level) behaviors. Most studies reviewed promoted fresh produce, although few discouraged purchasing and consumption of unhealthy foods. Further research that uses robust study designs and measurements are needed in real community settings to simultaneously test subsidies of healthy foods and beverages and the effects of increased costs of unhealthy foods and beverages.
Acknowledgments
This research was supported by Healthy Eating Research, a national program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of RWJF. RWJF had no role in study design; collection, analysis, and interpretation of data; writing the article; and the decision to submit the article for publication. We thank Dr Mary Story for her helpful comments.
Author Information
Corresponding Author: Joel Gittelsohn, PhD, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Department of International Health, Global Obesity Prevention Center and Center for Human Nutrition, 615 N Wolfe St, Baltimore, MD, 21205. Telephone: 410-955-3927. Email: jgittel1@jhu.edu.
Author Affiliations: 1Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Department of International Health, Global Obesity Prevention Center and Center for Human Nutrition, Baltimore, Maryland.
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Tables
Table 1. Studies of Pricing Strategies to Encourage Purchasing and Consumption of Healthy Foods and Beverages, 2000–2016
Type of Study/Study Name | Design | Sample Size | Duration | Target Group/Dates | Model/ Theory | Goal or Purpose | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Financial discounts on healthy foods and beverages | |||||||
Baltimore Healthy Carryouts (10–17) | Quasi-experimental, 2 arms | 8 Carryout restaurants, 186 consumers | 8 months | Low-income black residents in Baltimore, Maryland, 2011 | SCT, SEM, SM | To improve healthy food purchasing in carryout restaurants offering a reduced-price combination meal; to increase total sales of healthy foods and carryout revenue | |
B’More Healthy Retail Rewards (18,19) | RCT, 4 arms: 1) pricing incentive at wholesaler, 2) communications, 3) pricing and communications, 4) control | 24 Corner stores, 1 wholesaler, 360 store customers | 6 months | Low-income black adult consumers in Baltimore, Maryland, 2012–2013 | SCT, SEM | To assess the impact of separate and combined pricing and communication strategies on food purchasing and on retailer stocking and sales | |
Not named (healthy foods at swimming pools) (20) | Quasi-experimental successive and additive interventions: signage, taste-testing, price reduction; qualitative and quantitative observations | 2 Concession stands, 650 adults, 342 children | 5 months | Pool patrons: children and adults living in Alberta, Canada, in 2012 | BE | To assess the comparative and additive efficacy of 2 nudges and an economic incentive in supporting healthy food purchases | |
HealthWorks (21–24) | Group-randomized controlled trial, 2 arms: 1) intervention, 2) control | 6 Worksites, 1,672 adults | 2 years | Employees at 6 worksites in Minneapolis–St Paul, Minnesota, 2006–2008 | SCT | To positively influence weight gain prevention | |
Not named (Mississippi Healthy Beverages) (25) | Quasi-experimental design: first year, no intervention; second year, intervention | 15 Schools (no individual-level data) | 2 years | School-aged children (K–12), various income levels, living in Mississippi, 2005–2006 | None reported | To improve purchase of healthy beverage choices; maintaining profit in school stores by increasing availability, reducing prices, and labeling | |
Not named (multi-component intervention in sports clubs) (26) | Group-randomized controlled trial, 2 arms: 1) intervention, 2) control | 85 Clubs, 1,394 club members | 2.5 years | Adult sports club members in New South Wales, Australia, 2009–2012 | SEM | To increase consumption, availability, and sales of non-SSBs and FV in sporting club canteens | |
Supermarket Healthy Eating for Life (SHELf) trial (27–30) | RCT, 4 arms: 1) skill-building, 2) price reduction, 3) skill-building and price reduction, 4) control | 642 Women; impact data reported on 574 women | 3 months | Female, main household food shoppers, low-SES and high-SES neighborhoods in Australia, 2011–2012 | SEM, SCT | To increase purchasing and consumption of FV, reduce purchasing of SSBs, increase purchasing of low-calorie soft drinks and water | |
Supermarket Healthy Options Project (SHOP) (31–34) | RCT, 4 arms: 1) tailored nutrition education, 2) price reduction, 3) combination of tailored nutrition and price reduction, 4) control | 1,104 Adults | 6 months | Diverse adult food shoppers, including Maori/Pacific Islanders in New Zealand, 2007–2009 | None reported | To test the effect of price discounts and nutrition education on supermarket food and nutrient purchases | |
Not named (Lima University cafeteria study) (35) | Quasi-experimental, 3 phases: 1) location only, 2) location and signage, 3) location, signage, and price reduction | 150 Students; qualitative interviews, 12 students | 6 weeks | Young adults, college students in Lima Peru, 2016 | SM | To improve fruit purchases in a university cafeteria | |
Redeemable coupons or vouchers for healthy foods and beverages targeting participants in food assistance programs | |||||||
Farmers Market Fresh Fund Incentive Program (36) | Mixed-methods, pre–post repeated measure design; no comparison group | 908 Participants; 252 with longer follow-up (1 y) | 19 months | Low-income urban Hispanic families in San Diego, California, 2010–2011 | None reported | To examine the effect of a doubling incentive on number of farmers market visits, consumer diets, and economic benefits to farmers | |
Project FRESH (Farm Resources Encouraging and Supporting Health) (37) | Quasi-experimental, 4 arms: 1) coupon, 2) education, 3) coupon and education, 4) control | 455 Adults | 4 months | Low-income black women and white women receiving WIC in Genesee County, Michigan, 2011 | None reported | To increase FV attitudes and intake through a coupon intervention and education combined | |
Not named (Los Angeles economic subsidy) (38,39) | Quasi-experimental, 3 arms: 1) WIC site no. 1 received supermarket voucher, 2) WIC site no. 2 received farmers market voucher, 3) WIC site no. 3 was control | 454 Adults | 6 months | Adult Hispanic women receiving WIC in Los Angeles, California, 2001 | None reported | To increase FV intake through an economic subsidy for FV for postpartum WIC participants | |
Shop N Save (40) | Quasi-experimental, time series, no comparison | 336 Adults | 2011 and 2012 farmers market season (40 total market days) | Low-income, predominantly black women in rural South Carolina, 2011–2012 | CBPR | To increase access to FV, increase use of food assistance, and improve revenue trends at a farmers market through a pricing intervention | |
Redeemable coupons or vouchers for healthy foods and beverages targeting nonparticipants in food assistance programs | |||||||
Not named (French supermarkets) (41,42) | RCT, 3 arms: 1) letter with social norm feedback, 2) letter plus financial incentive, 3) control | 2,672 Adults | 12 months | Low-income health-deprived adults in France, 2007–2009 | None reported | To evaluate the impact of nutritional counseling alone, or counseling plus vouchers, on FV consumption and biomarkers | |
Not named (New York City farmers markets) (43) | Case-control, nonrandomized trial, 2 arms: 1) rebate, 2) control | 169,485 Households | 12 weeks | Low-income overweight Latino women with type 2 diabetes in New York City, 2011 | None reported | To improve intake and purchasing of FV by a combined education and voucher intervention | |
Spend Study (44) | RCT, 2 arms: 1) rebate, 2) control | 5,076 SNAP participants | 4 weeks | Low-income, food-insecure households with 1 child or more aged ≤18 y in New Zealand, 2009–2010 | None reported | To examine the effect of additional money (supermarket vouchers) on food expenditures in food-insecure households with children. | |
Trying Alternative Cafeteria Options in Schools (TACOS) (45–50) | RCT, 2 arms: 1) intervention; 2) control | 54 male and female students | 2 years | Secondary school students in Minneapolis–St Paul, Minnesota, 2000–2002 | SCT | To increase availability and sales of low-fat food options in high school cafeterias | |
Not named (United Kingdom fruit juice delivery) (51) | RCT, 2 arms: 1) rewards intervention, 2) delayed intervention control | 58 Adults | 30 weeks | Low-income pregnant women in the United Kingdom | None reported | To increase fruit and fruit juice intake by pregnant women by using vouchers or counseling | |
What to Eat for Lunch study (52) | RCT, 2 arms: 1) intervention (2 phases: full intervention including voucher; partial intervention no voucher), 2) delayed treatment control | 28 Adults | 8 weeks | Overweight/obese hospital employees, majority black women, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 2012 | IMB | To promote healthy lunch purchases at work through combined mindful eating, initial price reductions, and online pre-ordering | |
Cash Rebate | |||||||
Not named (Boston social norm and rebate study) (53) | RCT, 3 arms: 1) letter with social norm feedback, 2) letter plus financial incentive, 3) control | 2,672 Adults | 6 months | White high-income hospital employees, Boston, Massachusetts, 2012–2013 | None reported | To increase healthy food purchases through social norm feedback with and without a financial incentive | |
Healthy Food program (54,55) | Case-control, nonrandomized trial, 2 arms: 1) rebate, 2) control | 169,485 Households | 5 months | Members of a South African health plan, South Africa, 2009–2012 | None reported | To examine the effect of price reductions for healthy food items on food purchases (healthy and unhealthy) | |
Healthy Incentives Pilot (HIP) (56,57) | RCT, 2 arms: 1) rebate; 2) control | 5,076 SNAP participants | 12-months intervention staggered over 3 waves | SNAP participants in rural, urban, and suburban communities in Hampden County, Massachusetts, 2011–2012 | ET | To test the effect of a rebate on FV purchases on change in purchasing of FV | |
Not named (Philadelphia financial incentives) (58) | RCT, 2 arms: 1) treatment, 2) control | 54 Men and women | 3 months | Low-income, predominantly black, middle-aged adults in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania(year not provided) | None reported | To test the effects of financial incentives for the purchase of healthy foods and beverages on purchasing of healthy food items, dietary intake, household food environment, BMI | |
Rewards study (59–61) | RCT, 2 arms: 1) rewards intervention, 2) delayed intervention control | 58 Adults | 12-week pilot study of 26-week study duration in 4 phases | Low-income black adults in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 2010–2011 | SEM | To assess impact of rewards-based incentives on purchases of fresh and frozen FV | |
Disincentives for unhealthy food and beverage purchases, with and without incentives for healthy food and beverage purchases | |||||||
Berkeley, California, excise tax on soda (62,63) | Natural experiment, pre–post with a comparison group (San Francisco, Oakland) | 2,989 (different samples: pretax, 1,048; posttax, 1,941) | 1 year | Low-income black and Hispanic population in Berkeley, 2014–2015 | None reported | To evaluate the impact of the excise tax ($0.01/oz) on SSB prices and consumption | |
Danish saturated fat tax (64–67) | Natural experiment, pre–post assessments | 2,577 Households, 1,293 total retailers | 2 years | Danish consumers, 2010–2012 | None reported | To estimate the impact of a saturated fat tax on consumption of saturated fat and other nontargeted dietary measures | |
Excise tax on SSBs in Mexico (68–71) | Natural experiment, pre–post assessments | >50,000 Households in Mexico, 14,784 with children | 2 years | Mexican households, especially households with a child aged 2–5 y, 2012–2014 | None reported | To determine the effect of the 1 peso/L tax on SSBs on SSB purchases | |
Not named (French food baskets) (72) | Experimental, controlled, 2 conditions tested: 1) FV subsidy only, 2) FV and other healthy food subsidy plus increased price on unhealthy products | 128 Women | 1 day | Low- and medium-income women, main food shoppers, in Grenoble and Lyon, France, 2008 | None reported | To explore the effect of food price policies (taxes, subsidies) on expenditures for and nutritional quality of the food baskets chosen by low-income and medium-income households | |
Not named (Minneapolis financial incentives) (73) | RCT, 4 arms: 1) FV incentive, 2) restrictions, 3) both, 4) control | 297 Adults | 12 weeks | New SNAP participants in Minneapolis, Minnesota, 2013–2015 | None reported | To determine if an FV financial incentive alone, prohibition of purchasing unhealthy foods with food benefits alone, both in combination, or control improves diet quality | |
Not named (Brussels University cafeteria study) (74) | Mixed-methods study with 2 phases (phase 1, French fries followed by short interviews; phase 2, fruit intervention followed by short interviews) | 230 Students; sales data recorded on 2,300–2,930 sales for phase 1 and 3,235–3,802 during phase 2. Qualitative research: 230 students | 10 weeks in 2 phases | University students eating in on-campus cafeteria, Brussels, Belgium, 2015 | None reported | To examine the effect of a pricing intervention (tax on French fries and 10%–20% price subsidy on fruit) on students’ purchasing behavior |
Table 2. Intervention and Evaluation Strategies of Food and Beverage Pricing Studies, 2000–2016
Type of Study/Study Name | Type of Food or Beverage | Source | Intervention | Change of Availability, Location, or Labeling | Policy | Other | Impact Measure: Retail | Impact Measure: Consumer |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Financial discounts on healthy foods and beverages | ||||||||
Baltimore Healthy Carryouts (10–17) | Healthy prepared foods (side dishes, entrees) and beverages (reduced or no sugar) | 8 Carryout restaurants | Reduced-price healthy combination meal | Increased stocking of healthy foods and beverages; revised menu board to highlight healthy foods and beverages (labeling, photos) | None | Nutrition education | Sales, revenues (carryout) | Psychosocial: none; behavioral: food purchasing; health: none |
B’More Healthy Retail Rewards (18,19) | FV, low-sugar beverages, nutrient-dense foods, low-fat snacks, whole- grain products | 24 Corner stores, 1 wholesaler | 10%–30% Price discount on healthy food items at point of purchase from wholesaler | Increased stocking of promoted healthy foods; shelf labels and shelf talkers identifying healthy foods in store and at wholesaler | None | Nutrition education, media, and structural changes | Sales (retailer and wholesaler) and owner’s psychosocial factors | Psychosocial: food security, knowledge, self-efficacy, intentions; behavioral: food purchasing, dietary intake; health: BMI, food security |
Not named (healthy foods at swimming pools) (20) | Healthy items meeting definition of “choose most often” (Alberta Nutritional Guidelines for Children) | 2 Concession stands in an outdoor swimming pool facility | 30% Discount on healthy foods | Heathy menu items emphasized with photographs, appealing names; signage large and close to cashier; price reduction for healthy foods indicated in signage | None | Staff training, taste testing of healthy foods | Sales, revenues, and gross profits | Psychosocial: none; behavioral: purchasing; health: none |
HealthWorks (21–24) | Low-calorie fresh and prepared foods | 6 Worksite cafeterias, vending machines | 15% Price reduction on calorie-smart foods | Increased availability of healthy foods by at least 50% of all cafeteria and vending machine offerings; smaller portion sizes as substitutes; labeled calorie-smart items at point of purchase | None | Media, weight and activity self-monitoring, and nutrition education | None | Psychosocial: none; behavioral: stair use, absenteeism; health: BMI (measured height and weight) |
Not named (Mississippi Healthy Beverages) (25) | Healthy beverages (water, 100% fruit juice, sports drinks) | 18 School vending machines and stores | 10%–25% Discount on healthy drinks | At least 50% of beverages sold in school should be water, 100% fruit juices, and sports drinks; passive marketing of beverages through changed facings and display cases | None | None | None | None |
Not named (multi-component intervention in sports clubs) (26) | Fresh FV (fruit, salads, or salad sandwiches), non-SSBs | 85 Sporting club canteens | Combination meals with FV products and water packaged together at a reduced price | Substituted higher fat and energy products with lower fat and energy products and introduced products lower in energy, fat, or sodium; positioned promoted foods at eye level, upper half of refrigerator, or on the counter; placed signage and posters to draw attention to FV products and non-SSBs | Written food and nutrition policy | Media, nutrition education, and training | Financial records of canteen revenues | Psychosocial: none; behavioral: purchasing; health: none |
Supermarket Healthy Eating for Life (SHELf) trial (27–30) | FV (fresh, frozen, canned, and dried), low-calorie soft drinks, and water | 2 Grocery stores, 1 in low-SES area, 1 in high-SES area | Reduce purchase of SSBs; 20% price discounts on all FV, low-calorie soft drinks, and water | Not done | None | Nutrition education | Sales data (on healthy fats, FV, healthy meats, and milk) | Psychosocial: none; behavioral: electronic sales data measured as a proxy for purchasing; health: none |
Supermarket Healthy Options Project (SHOP) (31–34) | Healthy core foods and beverages that met Tick program criteria (total fat, saturated fat, trans fatty acids, sodium, added sugar, fiber, and calcium) | 8 New Zealand supermarkets, all part of the same chain | 12.5% Discount for healthy foods that met Tick program criteria | Not done | None | Nutrition education | Sales data (cereals, healthy fats, FV, healthy meats, and milk) | None |
Not named (Lima University cafeteria study) (35) | Fresh fruits | 1 University cafeteria | 33% Reduction in fruit price | Relocated fruit items closer to cash register; nutrition benefit sign at fruit container; poster promoting the item, and price tags | None | None | Cafeteria sales data (unit, ratio of fruit purchased) | Psychosocial: reasons for not purchasing fruits; behavioral: none; health: none |
Redeemable coupons/vouchers for healthy food and beverage items targeting recipients of food assistant programs | ||||||||
Farmers Market Fresh Fund Incentive Program (36) | Fresh FV, healthy packaged foods (eggs, bread, and meat) | 5 Farmers markets | Fresh Fund incentive match tokens (up to $20/month) for SNAP recipients | Not done | None | Media campaign | Revenue of Fresh Fund and non–Fresh Fund purchases | Psychosocial: perceived healthfulness of diet; behavioral: frequency of use of farmers market, money spent on FV per week, daily servings of FV consumed; health: none |
Project FRESH (Farm Resources Encouraging and Supporting Health) (37) | Fresh FV | City farmers markets (no specific number) | $20 Coupons for farmers markets | Not done | None | Nutrition education | None | Psychosocial, attitudes toward FV; behavioral, intake of FV (daily, perceived change); health, none |
Not named (Los Angeles economic subsidy) (38,39) | Fresh FV | City supermarkets, farmers markets | $10/Week redeemable voucher | Not done | None | None | Sales of beverages (monthly) | None |
Shop N Save (40) | Fresh FV | 1 Farmers market | $5 Matching coupons for participants of SNAP, WIC, Senior or WIC FMNP | Not done | None | None | Consumer sales receipts | None |
Redeemable coupons or vouchers for healthy food and beverage items targeting nonparticipants in food assistance programs | ||||||||
Not named (French supermarkets) (41,42) | Fresh FV | 22 Supermarkets | Supermarket vouchers, (10 Euros/person in the household for fresh FV) | Not done | None | Nutrition education | Availability of calorie-smart foods | Psychosocial: none; behavioral: self-reported voucher use, FV consumption; health: BMI, blood pressure, blood measures of vitamin C, serum β carotene |
Not named (New York City farmers markets) (43) | Fresh FV | 1 Farmers market | $6 Vouchers for farmers market purchases | Not done | None | Nutrition education | None | Psychosocial: none; behavioral: frequency of use of farmers market, intake of FV; health: BMI, LDL cholesterol, HbA1c, and BP measures |
Spend Study (44) | FV, healthy grocery food items, and highly processed foods | Supermarket (no specific number), identified as most frequently used | $5 Supermarket voucher per individual in the household (average $17/household/ wk; voucher was not specific for any food or food group) | Not done | None | Main food preparer received reminder text messages, emails, or telephone calls | None | Psychosocial: none; behavioral: food group purchases, total household food expenditure; health: none |
Trying Alternative Cafeteria Options in Schools (TACOS) (45–50) | Low-fat foods (≤5 g/serving) | 20 High school cafeterias | Coupon (one-time free low-fat food), raffle for each low-fat food purchase | Increased availability of low-fat foods by 30% relative to baseline | None | Nutrition education, media campaigns | Unit sales, total revenue from low-fat foods sales | Psychosocial: perceived environment, behavioral intentions; behavioral: self-reported food choices; health: none |
Not named (United Kingdom fruit juice delivery) (51) | Fruit, 100% fruit juice | Delivery system | Vouchers exchanged for 100% fruit juice by the local milk delivery service; received 21 Euros/week for 30 weeks | Not done | None | Nutrition education | None | Psychosocial: barriers to eating fruit; behavioral: dietary intake (frequency of fruit consumption in past 7 days); health: serum β carotene |
What to Eat for Lunch study (52) | Low-calorie/low-fat cafeteria lunch | 1 Hospital cafeteria | Vouchers to use on lunch purchases (20 $1.25 vouchers for 4 wk) | Online pre-ordering system that provided calorie and fat content; default option was lower calories/fat | None | Nutrition education | Food purchases; fat and calorie content of each item | Psychosocial: mindful eating questionnaire; behavioral: none; health: BMI, blood measures (HbA1c, triglycerides, HDL cholesterol, LDL cholesterol) |
Cash rebate | ||||||||
Not named (Boston social norm and rebate study) (53) | Healthy foods on menu (FV, whole grains, lean protein, low-fat dairy); avoiding saturated fat and calories | 1 Hospital cafeteria | Monthly financial award ($5–$30) based on proportion of green-labeled products purchased | Traffic-light system menu labeling | None | Nutrition education | Sales data from cafeteria cash registers | Psychosocial: none; behavioral: purchases of green-labeled foods; health: none |
Healthy Food program (54,55) | FV, other healthy foods, less-desirable foods and beverages, and neutral foods | 432 Supermarkets | 10%–25% Rebate for healthy food purchases | In-store labeling identifying eligible foods, which were also marked on store receipts | None | None | Scanner data from credit card charges at the supermarket | Psychosocial: none; behavioral: consumption of FV, whole grains, salt-added foods, salty and sweet snacks; health: BMI measure |
Healthy Incentives Pilot (HIP) (56,57) | Fresh, canned, frozen, and dried FV | All SNAP-authorized retailers in Hampden County, including supermarkets, superstores, grocery and food specialty stores, convenience stores, and farmers markets | 30% Rebate on total FV purchased using EBT cards for 12-month period | Not done | None | Nutrition education | FV sales | Psychosocial: attitudes and perceptions about FV; behavioral: diet (24-hour recall, FV screener); health: none |
Not named (Philadelphia financial incentives) (58) | FV (fresh, canned, frozen), low-calorie beverages, and low-energy–dense foods | All food stores providing receipts | Financial incentive ($1) for every healthy food item purchased over 3 months, $100 maximum | Not done | None | Nutrition education | None | Psychosocial: attitudes toward grocery stores (baseline only); behavioral: dietary intake (3-day food record), home food environment; health: BMI, waist circumference measures |
Rewards study (59–61) | Fresh or frozen FV (defined by WIC guidelines) | 1 Large supermarket in a predominantly black census tract | 50% Rebate on dollar amount spent on fresh or frozen FV, reduced to 25% during a tapering phase | Not done | None | Communication materials, nutrition education | Point-of-sale data by family provided by supermarket | Psychosocial: perceptions of behaviors resulting from study (post); behavioral: none; health: none |
Disincentives for unhealthy food and beverage purchases, with and without incentives for healthy food and beverage purchases | ||||||||
Berkeley, California, excise tax on soda (62,63) | SSBs | All beverage retailers in Berkeley, California | Not done | Not done | SSB $0.01-per-ounce tax on distributors | None | Change in price pre- and post-tax | Psychosocial: awareness of tax; behavioral: change in consumption of SSBs and water; health: none |
Danish saturated fat tax (64–67) | Foods containing saturated fat (eg, butter, blends, margarine, oil, meat, sour cream) | 1,293 Food retailers in Denmark | Not done | Not done | 25% Tax on foods high in saturated fats | None | Monthly sales and revenues | Psychosocial: none; behavioral: purchase of food, food intake; health: modeled estimation of mortality from NCDs, BMI measured |
Excise tax on SSBs in Mexico (68–71) | SSBs, nonessential high energy, high density foods | 16,000 Food retailers | Not done | Not done | 1 Peso per liter tax on SSBs | None | Change in prices of SSBs | Psychosocial: none; behavioral; purchases of SSBs and other nonessential foods; health: none |
Not named (French food baskets) (72) | 43 Foods were classified as FV, 24 as other healthy products, 51 as neutral, 62 as unhealthy | Real-life laboratory, online order (foods received) | Subsidy for FV (30% discount), tax on unhealthy products (30% increase) | Price change identified on screen (old price crossed out) | Assessed impact of subsidies and taxes on food basket selections | None | None | Psychosocial: none; behavioral: purchasing of food baskets; health: none |
Not named (Minneapolis financial incentives) (73) | FV, SSBs, sweet baked goods, candies | All SNAP retailers | 30% financial incentive for FV purchased using food benefits; restriction (not allowed to buy SSBs, sweet baked goods, or candies) with food benefits | Not done | None | Training | None | Psychosocial: food security; behavioral: food intake and diet quality; health: none |
Not named (Brussels University cafeteria study) (74) | French fries (unhealthy food product) and fruit (healthy food product) | 1 On-campus, Brussels University restaurant | Total meal price increases of 10% and 20% when choosing French fries, and 10% and 20% meal price decreases when choosing fruit for dessert | Point-of-purchase posters and information boards | None | Social media | French fries and fruit sales counts relative to total number of items sold | Psychosocial: food price, food preference, food knowledge, body satisfaction, perception of availability and access of food; behavioral: none; health: none |
Table 3. Findings from Pricing Intervention Studies, 2000–2016
Type of Study/Study Name | Retail Stocking and Sales | Consumer Psychosocial | Consumer Behavioral | Consumer Health Outcomes | Sustainabilitya | Quality of Researchb |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Studies of financial discounts on healthy foods and beverages | ||||||
Baltimore Healthy Carryouts (10–17) | 296% Increase in units of healthy sides and beverages sold; total revenues (healthy foods only: 39%, healthy foods and beverages: 173%) among intervention carryouts from baseline | —c | 450% Increase in purchasing of promoted foods | —c | Moderate | 9 |
B’More Healthy Retail Rewards (18,19) | 40%–61% Increase in stocking score in all intervention groups; 15% increase in sales of snack foods for combined intervention group | —c | —c | —c | —d | 8 |
Not named (Healthy Foods at Swimming Pools) (20) | 30% Increase in sales of healthy items during discounted period in a subsample | —c | Overweight or obese patrons and males were more sensitive to signage plus taste testing plus pricing intervention | —c | —d | 6 |
HealthWorks (21–24) | 50% Increase in availability healthy foods; no impact on pricing (not implemented) | —c | Increase in frequency of self-weighing | No difference on weight outcomes over the 2-year period | Moderate; all components but pricing intervention were sustained. | 9 |
Not named (Mississippi Healthy Beverages) (25) | Increase in sales and profits of 125% on units of water, 134% on units of sports drinks, >1,000% increase on units of fruit juice in most schools; 55% decrease on unit sales of soda in 9 schools | —c | —c | —c | —d | 5 |
Not named (multi-component intervention in sports clubs) (26) | 63% Increase in availability of FV | —c | 60% Increase in club members purchasing FV; 13.4% increase in club members purchasing non-SSBs | —c | —d | 7 |
Supermarket Healthy Eating for Life (SHELf) trial (27–30) | —c | Increased perceptions for healthy eating, cooking, and eating healthy in all interventions; no differences among intervention groups | 35% Increase in purchasing of FV and 15% increase in non-SSB purchases in price reduction alone and price plus behavior arms; impact not maintained at 6-months postintervention; no effect on water or low-calorie beverages | —c | Low | 10 |
Supermarket Healthy Options Project (SHOP) (31–34) | —c | —c | 10% Increase in purchases of healthy items (0.79 kg/wk) in discount group at 6 months; no effect reported on education-only group at 6 months | —c | High; after cessation of pricing discount, discount group maintained FV and other healthy food purchasing at 12 months | 8 |
Not named (Lima University cafeteria study) (35) | 135% Increase in units of fruit sales | Most common reason to not purchase fruit was preference for unhealthy snack foods | 57% Increase in purchasing of fruits among females and tripled among males | —c | —d | 2 |
Redeemable coupons or vouchers for healthy foods and beverages targeting participants in food assistance programs | ||||||
Farmers Market Fresh Fund Incentive Program (36) | 74% Increase in revenue of farmers market vendors | Increase in perception of healthfulness and likelihood to continue shopping at a farmers market | 24% Increase in people consuming 5 or more FV servings per day | —c | High; participating farmers markets continued to offer incentives to consumers | 6 |
Project FRESH (Farm Resources Encouraging and Supporting Health) (37) | —c | Increase in attitudes and beliefs regarding FV in intervention group | 140%–640% Increase in FV intake score in intervention groups | —c | —d | 7 |
Not named (Los Angeles economic subsidy) (38,39) | —c | —c | 30% Increase in FV intake in intervention groups | —c | High; increase in FV intake sustained 6 months after intervention | 7 |
Shop N Save (40) | 43% Increase in food assistance revenues at farmers markets | —c | —c | —c | High; Double Buck program to be implemented by South Carolina | 5 |
Redeemable coupons or vouchers for healthy foods and beverages targeting nonparticipants in food assistance programs | ||||||
Not named (French supermarkets) (41,42) | —c | —c | 33% Increase in FV intake in voucher group and 32% for advice group | No change in serum vitamin C and β carotene levels; no difference in other health measures by group | —d | 6 |
Not named (New York City farmers markets) (43) | —c | Decrease in reported difficulty of affording FV | 20% Increase in FV intake (servings/d) | Decreased BMI and HbA1c, but no significant difference by group | —d | 7 |
Spend Study (44) | —c | —c | No difference in expenditures on other food groups (ie, FV, meat and poultry, dairy) | —c | —d | 7 |
Trying Alternative Cafeteria Options in Schools (TACOS) (45–50) | Increase in sales of low-fat foods (at year 1, 27.5%; at year 2, 33.6%); no significant change in total revenues | Increased perception of more low-fat food availability; no change in environmental or behavioral intentions | No impact on food choices | —c | —d | 10 |
Not named (United Kingdom fruit juice delivery) (51) | —c | Taste and appetite were barriers to eating fruit | 59.1% Increase in fruit juice intake (net percentage of consumption) | Increase in serum βcarotene | —d | 8 |
What to Eat for Lunch study (52) | —c | Increased scores for mindful eating behaviors | 8% Decrease in total calories and 6% decrease in total fat in food purchases using pre-ordering only (no vouchers) compared with baseline and discount phase | Decreased weight, HbA1c, and lipid profiles from pre to post, but not significant | High; in partial intervention phase without any financial incentives, participants still bought foods with lower calorie and fat content | 9 |
Cash rebate | ||||||
Not named (Boston social norm and rebate study) (53) | —c | —c | 2.2% Increase in purchasing of green-label foods; no difference between intervention arms; increase in healthy food choices in social norms and small financial incentives | —c | Low; intervention effect did not persist 3 months after completion of trial | 10 |
Healthy Food program (54,55) | —c | —c | 9.3% Increase in healthy food to total food expenditures; 63% increase in consumption of FV and 195% of whole-grain foods; 68% decrease in consumption of unhealthy foods (high-sugar or high-salt foods, fried foods, processed meats, fast food) | No effect on obesity | —d | 7 |
Healthy Incentives Pilot (HIP) (56,57) | Increase in FV sales in large grocery store (qualitative finding) | Increase in attitude toward FV over time | 40% Increase in FV intake; 10% decreased intake of refined grain; increase in HEI–2010 score | —c | —d | 9 |
Not named (Philadelphia, financial incentives) (58) | —c | —c | 10% Increase in protein intake, 28% in calcium intake, and 60% in daily vegetable intake; increase in household food environment | Slight decrease in BMI in both groups | —d | 6 |
Rewards study (59–61) | —c | Increased perception of buying more FV | 25%–30% Increase in purchasing of FV servings/wk (30% increase in vegetable and 25% increase in fruit servings/wk); effect not sustained when incentive was reduced | —c | Low; changes not maintained during tapering period | 7 |
Disincentives for unhealthy food and beverage purchases, with and without incentives for healthy food and beverage purchases | ||||||
Berkeley, California, excise tax on soda (62,63) | 9% Increase in SSB retail prices in Berkeley | Increased knowledge about the tax | 21% increased consumption of SSBs; 63% increased water consumption | —c | High; tax is still in effect and Berkeley City Council allocated $1.5 million to fund program to reduce SSB consumption | 6 |
Danish saturated fat tax (64–67) | 5% Decrease in sales of ground beef and creams | —c | 4% Increase in saturated fat intake; 1% increase in salt intake; 9% increase in FV intake | Increase in deaths from cardiovascular disease (modeled) | Low; tax is no longer in effect | 5 |
Excise tax on SSBs in Mexico (68–71) | 47% Decrease in sales of taxed foods; no change in sales of untaxed foods | —c | 12% Decrease in SSB purchases; 5% decrease in nonessential food purchases | —c | High; tax is still in effect | 5 |
Not named (French food baskets) (72) | —c | —c | 25%–30% Increase in quantity of FV purchased among low- and middle-income shoppers; 52% decrease in unhealthy food expenditures among middle-income shoppers for nutrient profile condition | —c | —d | 4 |
Not named (Minneapolis financial incentives) (73) | —c | Increased food security in all groups | 2%–6% Decreased energy intake (incentive, 2%; restriction, 6%; combined, 6%); 66% increased intake of fruit; 8% increase in HEI–2010 score | —c | —d | 9 |
Not named (Brussels University cafeteria study) (74) | Increase in availability of healthy foods (qualitative result: perception of students that influenced their food choices) | 10.9%–21.8% decrease in French fries purchases; 25.1%–42.4% increase FV purchases | —c | Moderate; students believed that fruit price reduction could be sustained in the long term | 3 |
Appendix: Pricing Strategies to Encourage Availability, Purchase, and Consumption of Healthy Foods and Beverages: A Systematic Review
This appendix is available for download as a Microsoft Word document [DOC – 33 KB].
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