TY - JOUR
T1 - Sweet or not
T2 - Using information and cognitive dissonance to nudge children toward healthier food choices
AU - Nguyen, Trang
AU - de Brauw, Alan
AU - van den Berg, Marrit
PY - 2022/12
Y1 - 2022/12
N2 - In the interest of public health, it is important to nudge children toward healthier food choices (e.g., beverages with less added sugar). We conducted a field experiment in a peri-urban region in Vietnam to evaluate the effects of information and cognitive dissonance on the food choices of children. Our sample consisted of more than 1200 primary school children, randomly assigned into three groups: control, health information, and health information plus hypocrisy inducement. The third group was intended to raise cognitive dissonance by illustrating the gap between what people know they should do (socially desired behaviors) and what they actually do (transgressions). The results indicate that health information increased the likelihood of selecting milk with less sugar by around 30 %, as compared to the control group. Hypocrisy inducement did not make any additional contribution to healthier food choices. The treatment effects declined when there was a delay between the treatment and the behavioral choice. We discuss the practical implications of our findings for short-term intervention field studies.
AB - In the interest of public health, it is important to nudge children toward healthier food choices (e.g., beverages with less added sugar). We conducted a field experiment in a peri-urban region in Vietnam to evaluate the effects of information and cognitive dissonance on the food choices of children. Our sample consisted of more than 1200 primary school children, randomly assigned into three groups: control, health information, and health information plus hypocrisy inducement. The third group was intended to raise cognitive dissonance by illustrating the gap between what people know they should do (socially desired behaviors) and what they actually do (transgressions). The results indicate that health information increased the likelihood of selecting milk with less sugar by around 30 %, as compared to the control group. Hypocrisy inducement did not make any additional contribution to healthier food choices. The treatment effects declined when there was a delay between the treatment and the behavioral choice. We discuss the practical implications of our findings for short-term intervention field studies.
KW - Behavioral economics
KW - Child health
KW - Cognitive dissonance
KW - Health information
KW - Lab-in-field experiment
U2 - 10.1016/j.ehb.2022.101185
DO - 10.1016/j.ehb.2022.101185
M3 - Article
C2 - 36170789
AN - SCOPUS:85143379973
SN - 1570-677X
VL - 47
SP - 101185
JO - Economics and Human Biology
JF - Economics and Human Biology
ER -