Nutrients, Vol. 18, Pages 1645: A Randomized Intercept Survey Trial to Test the Effectiveness of Multiple Traffic Light Labels on Online Grocery Shopping Behaviors in Bahrain

Nutrients, Vol. 18, Pages 1645: A Randomized Intercept Survey Trial to Test the Effectiveness of Multiple Traffic Light Labels on Online Grocery Shopping Behaviors in Bahrain

Nutrients doi: 10.3390/nu18101645

Authors:
Soye Shin
Ali Shubbar Jawad
Buthaina Yusuf Ajlan
Fatema Ahmed Mohammed Isa
Amna Ghassan Alawadhi
Reem Alsukait
Eric A. Finkelstein

Background/Objectives: Multiple Traffic Light (MTL) front-of-pack (FOP) labels are being considered in Bahrain. We tested whether an adapted MTL label improves the nutritional quality of grocery purchases. Methods: In a two-arm randomized controlled intercept trial (January–May 2025), adults (≥21 years) responsible for household grocery shopping were recruited in high-footfall public venues and asked to complete a one-time shop on a tablet-based, purpose-built online grocery platform. The MTL label was adapted for Arabic reading direction and displayed per-serving nutrients and % recommended daily intake. Treatment effects were estimated using ordinary least squares regressions with robust standard errors and covariate adjustment. Results: Of 395 randomized participants, 360 were included in primary analyses (control n = 183; MTL n = 177). MTL exposure was not associated with a significant change in the primary outcome (basket weighted average MTL score per serving; β = 0.037; p = 0.64) or in per-serving calories and nutrients of concern (all p > 0.17). In the post-shop assessment, only 47.2% of participants correctly interpreted MTL labels, indicating modest objective label comprehension under the study conditions. Conclusions: These findings suggest that the impact of front-of-pack labels likely depends on both implementation features and consumer understanding, and that pairing labels with public communication and nutrition literacy initiatives may be necessary to maximize the effectiveness of labels in Bahrain and the wider Gulf region.

​Background/Objectives: Multiple Traffic Light (MTL) front-of-pack (FOP) labels are being considered in Bahrain. We tested whether an adapted MTL label improves the nutritional quality of grocery purchases. Methods: In a two-arm randomized controlled intercept trial (January–May 2025), adults (≥21 years) responsible for household grocery shopping were recruited in high-footfall public venues and asked to complete a one-time shop on a tablet-based, purpose-built online grocery platform. The MTL label was adapted for Arabic reading direction and displayed per-serving nutrients and % recommended daily intake. Treatment effects were estimated using ordinary least squares regressions with robust standard errors and covariate adjustment. Results: Of 395 randomized participants, 360 were included in primary analyses (control n = 183; MTL n = 177). MTL exposure was not associated with a significant change in the primary outcome (basket weighted average MTL score per serving; β = 0.037; p = 0.64) or in per-serving calories and nutrients of concern (all p > 0.17). In the post-shop assessment, only 47.2% of participants correctly interpreted MTL labels, indicating modest objective label comprehension under the study conditions. Conclusions: These findings suggest that the impact of front-of-pack labels likely depends on both implementation features and consumer understanding, and that pairing labels with public communication and nutrition literacy initiatives may be necessary to maximize the effectiveness of labels in Bahrain and the wider Gulf region. Read More

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