mmmm coke

Theresa Marteau (Behaviour and Health Research Unit) discusses how to get people to consume less sugar.

If sugary drinks were sold in , stores of them, and positioned them , we would drink fewer of them. But would we find these changes acceptable? 探花直播results of our show that most people find these 鈥渘udges鈥 (altering cues in the environment to change people鈥檚 behaviour) to be acceptable ways to prevent obesity. Taxing sugary drinks, however, was only acceptable to a minority.

But for both nudging and taxing, the acceptability of the intervention increased the more effective participants judged them to be. This suggests that people are prepared to trade off their dislike of an intervention for achieving a goal they value, such as tackling obesity.

As a population, we consume too much energy. Most people in the UK are now . We spend an estimated on treating the consequences. , including from sugary drinks, contributes to this.

Sugary drinks are consumed more by the explaining, in part, the higher rates of obesity in this group. Unfortunately, educating people about the health harms of consuming an excess of sugary drinks 鈥 an intervention that most people find acceptable 鈥 their consumption.

But the evidence is now growing that 鈥渘udges鈥 as well as taxes could reduce . 探花直播recent announcement of a in England comes with much public support, and the case is made more compelling by recent evidence from that taxing drinks reduces consumption, particularly among the poor. But obesity won鈥檛 be cracked by tax alone. Adding nudges to taxes would likely help, but the acceptability of nudging has, until now, been largely unknown.

In New York, a recent attempt to cap the size of sugary drinks sold in restaurants and other food outlets elicited a . But these views may have been influenced by campaigns run by industry-funded consumer groups that placed adverts on billboards and in newspapers asserting that this measure undermined . Given that introducing these sorts of interventions will probably require regulation, it is important to gauge public acceptability outside of the context of a media campaign in one city.

Change the environment, change the behaviour

For our study, we recruited 1,093 participants from the UK and 1,082 from the US.

We compared the acceptability of three nudge interventions (reducing the size of sugary drinks bottles, elongating the shape of cans of sugary drinks so they look larger than current cans, and altering where on the shelf drinks were placed) with two more traditional interventions: education and taxation.

Education was the most accepted intervention (more than 80% of participants considered it to be acceptable), taxation the least (fewer than 46% judged it acceptable), and the nudge interventions rated between these (range: 51% to 68%).

Highlighting the unconscious nature of nudges did not reduce their acceptability. Nudging is more acceptable than taxation, but the acceptability of both may be sensitive to evidence of their effectiveness.

Perceived effectiveness was the strongest predictor of acceptability for all interventions across both the US and UK groups. In other words, the more effective people perceived an intervention to be, the more acceptable they found it. This replicates findings from other studies.

Mexico provides an interesting case study. With funding from Bloomberg Philanthropies, non-governmental organisations bought prominent advertising space to counter industry opposition to sugary drinks taxes. This included presenting evidence of taxation鈥檚 effectiveness at preventing obesity and other consequences of high consumption. This supports the idea that clear communication to the public of an intervention鈥檚 effectiveness 鈥 in this case, taxing sugary drinks 鈥 can increase public acceptability of the intervention. This may then lead politicians to implement the intervention.

Attributing obesity to the environment, rather than willpower, also predicted acceptability. 探花直播more people attributed over-consumption to the environment, the greater their support for interventions, particularly the three nudge interventions. This suggests that the public鈥檚 judgements of nudging could become even more favourable if we can successfully convey scientific understandings of human behaviour. This would result in people understanding that much of our behaviour, that is shaped by the environment, takes place outside of conscious awareness. Changing the environment could therefore help tackle obesity.

, Professor of Behaviour and Health,

This article was originally published on . Read the .

探花直播opinions expressed in this article are those of the individual author(s) and do not represent the views of the 探花直播 of Cambridge.



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