4.5 Article

Impact of warning labels on reducing health halo effects of nutrient content claims on breakfast cereal packages: A mixed-measures experiment

期刊

APPETITE
卷 163, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.appet.2021.105229

关键词

Front-of-package labeling; Food marketing; Nutrient content claims; Health claims; Warning labels; Breakfast cereals; Food packaging; Experiment; Health halo

资金

  1. Commission for Scientific and Technological Research (CONICYT) of the Ministry of Education of Chile: Doctorado Becas Chile [72180276]
  2. Global Food Research Program at the Carolina Population Center

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study examined the impact of warning labels and nutrient content (NC) claims on Chilean adults' perceptions and behavioral intentions towards breakfast cereals. Fiber-related claims led to more positive ratings of the product, creating a health halo effect, while warnings had a main effect on product perceptions, reducing ratings even when NC claims were present. The findings suggest that warning labels can help mitigate the influences of NC claims on consumers' perceptions of product healthiness.
Chile recently implemented a food labeling law that requires packaged foods with sugar, saturated fats, sodium, and/or calorie content that exceeds government-defined thresholds to carry a front-of-package warning for each excessive nutrient. This law does not prohibit the use of nutrient content (NC) marketing claims on packages, as long as the claims do not directly contradict the warnings. Yet, having NC claims alongside nutrient warnings might send mixed messages confusing consumers about the overall healthiness of a product. The present study tests the co-occurrence of warning labels and NC claims in breakfast cereal packages on product perceptions and behavioral intentions of Chilean adults in a 3 (warnings: none, high calorie, high calorie/high sugar) x 3 (NC claims: none, fiber/wholegrain, low fat/cholesterol-free) mixed-measures experiment. Fiber-related claims had a main effect leading to more positive ratings of the product, compared to having no NC claims or fat-related claims. These positive ratings extended beyond perceptions of the fiber content to perceptions of overall healthiness, naturalness, quality, vitamin content, and intentions to purchase and recommend the product-a health halo effect. No significant interaction between warnings and NC claims was found. However, warnings had a main effect on perceptions irrespective of the presence of NC claims, with one warning significantly reducing ratings, dampening any halo effects, and two warnings further dampening any effects. These findings indicate that warning labels can mitigate, but not eliminate the influences of NC claims on consumer perceptions of product healthiness.

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