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Baseline Assessment of Children’s Meals and Healthy Beverage Options Prior to a State-Level Healthy Default Beverage (HDB) Law

In January 2020, Hawai‘i became the second state with a healthy default beverage (HDB) law, requiring restaurants to offer HDBs with their children’s meals. This observational study presents baseline characteristics of restaurants with a children’s menu and meal. The study describes pre-law beverage...

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Autores principales: McGurk, Meghan D., Cacal, Stephanie L., Vu, Uyen, Sentell, Tetine, Beckelman, Toby, Lee, Jessica, Yang, Alyssa, Pirkle, Catherine M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JHEAL 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10544922/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37789908
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author McGurk, Meghan D.
Cacal, Stephanie L.
Vu, Uyen
Sentell, Tetine
Beckelman, Toby
Lee, Jessica
Yang, Alyssa
Pirkle, Catherine M.
author_facet McGurk, Meghan D.
Cacal, Stephanie L.
Vu, Uyen
Sentell, Tetine
Beckelman, Toby
Lee, Jessica
Yang, Alyssa
Pirkle, Catherine M.
author_sort McGurk, Meghan D.
collection PubMed
description In January 2020, Hawai‘i became the second state with a healthy default beverage (HDB) law, requiring restaurants to offer HDBs with their children’s meals. This observational study presents baseline characteristics of restaurants with a children’s menu and meal. The study describes pre-law beverage options to inform future HDB policy language, implementation, and evaluation. Between November and December 2019, data were collected from a statewide sample of unique restaurants (N = 383) with health inspection permits. Restaurants were assessed separately for a children’s menu and meal using website reviews, telephone calls, and in-person visits. Meals were evaluated for pre-law beverage type and compliance. Logistic regression was used to estimate the likelihood of having a children’s menu and meal. Most of the restaurants were full-service (70.2%) and non-chains (67.9%). While 49.3% of restaurants had a children’s menu, only 16.7% had a children’s meal. Significant predictors of having a children’s menu were being full-service, national/international or local chains, neighbor island (non-Honolulu) locations, and hotel locations. Only being a national/international chain significantly predicted having a children’s meal. Although 35.9% of children’s meals offered a non–sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) option, only 3.1% offered law-compliant beverages. Inclusion of an SSB default option (60.9%) and not specifying the type of default beverage were the predominant factors for pre-law non-compliance. Results support the need for HDB regulations, especially for national/international chains, which were most likely to have children’s meals, and provide data to inform policies in other jurisdictions.
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spelling pubmed-105449222023-10-03 Baseline Assessment of Children’s Meals and Healthy Beverage Options Prior to a State-Level Healthy Default Beverage (HDB) Law McGurk, Meghan D. Cacal, Stephanie L. Vu, Uyen Sentell, Tetine Beckelman, Toby Lee, Jessica Yang, Alyssa Pirkle, Catherine M. J Healthy Eat Act Living Peer Reviewed Research In January 2020, Hawai‘i became the second state with a healthy default beverage (HDB) law, requiring restaurants to offer HDBs with their children’s meals. This observational study presents baseline characteristics of restaurants with a children’s menu and meal. The study describes pre-law beverage options to inform future HDB policy language, implementation, and evaluation. Between November and December 2019, data were collected from a statewide sample of unique restaurants (N = 383) with health inspection permits. Restaurants were assessed separately for a children’s menu and meal using website reviews, telephone calls, and in-person visits. Meals were evaluated for pre-law beverage type and compliance. Logistic regression was used to estimate the likelihood of having a children’s menu and meal. Most of the restaurants were full-service (70.2%) and non-chains (67.9%). While 49.3% of restaurants had a children’s menu, only 16.7% had a children’s meal. Significant predictors of having a children’s menu were being full-service, national/international or local chains, neighbor island (non-Honolulu) locations, and hotel locations. Only being a national/international chain significantly predicted having a children’s meal. Although 35.9% of children’s meals offered a non–sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) option, only 3.1% offered law-compliant beverages. Inclusion of an SSB default option (60.9%) and not specifying the type of default beverage were the predominant factors for pre-law non-compliance. Results support the need for HDB regulations, especially for national/international chains, which were most likely to have children’s meals, and provide data to inform policies in other jurisdictions. JHEAL 2021-04-01 /pmc/articles/PMC10544922/ /pubmed/37789908 Text en © JHEAL, 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0).
spellingShingle Peer Reviewed Research
McGurk, Meghan D.
Cacal, Stephanie L.
Vu, Uyen
Sentell, Tetine
Beckelman, Toby
Lee, Jessica
Yang, Alyssa
Pirkle, Catherine M.
Baseline Assessment of Children’s Meals and Healthy Beverage Options Prior to a State-Level Healthy Default Beverage (HDB) Law
title Baseline Assessment of Children’s Meals and Healthy Beverage Options Prior to a State-Level Healthy Default Beverage (HDB) Law
title_full Baseline Assessment of Children’s Meals and Healthy Beverage Options Prior to a State-Level Healthy Default Beverage (HDB) Law
title_fullStr Baseline Assessment of Children’s Meals and Healthy Beverage Options Prior to a State-Level Healthy Default Beverage (HDB) Law
title_full_unstemmed Baseline Assessment of Children’s Meals and Healthy Beverage Options Prior to a State-Level Healthy Default Beverage (HDB) Law
title_short Baseline Assessment of Children’s Meals and Healthy Beverage Options Prior to a State-Level Healthy Default Beverage (HDB) Law
title_sort baseline assessment of children’s meals and healthy beverage options prior to a state-level healthy default beverage (hdb) law
topic Peer Reviewed Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10544922/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37789908
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