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Changes in soft drinks purchased by British households associated with the UK soft drinks industry levy: controlled interrupted time series analysis

OBJECTIVE: To determine changes in household purchases of drinks and confectionery one year after implementation of the UK soft drinks industry levy (SDIL). DESIGN: Controlled interrupted time series analysis. PARTICIPANTS: Members of a panel of households reporting their purchasing on a weekly basi...

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Autores principales: Pell, David, Mytton, Oliver, Penney, Tarra L, Briggs, Adam, Cummins, Steven, Penn-Jones, Catrin, Rayner, Mike, Rutter, Harry, Scarborough, Peter, Sharp, Stephen J, Smith, Richard D, White, Martin, Adams, Jean
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7944367/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33692200
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.n254
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author Pell, David
Mytton, Oliver
Penney, Tarra L
Briggs, Adam
Cummins, Steven
Penn-Jones, Catrin
Rayner, Mike
Rutter, Harry
Scarborough, Peter
Sharp, Stephen J
Smith, Richard D
White, Martin
Adams, Jean
author_facet Pell, David
Mytton, Oliver
Penney, Tarra L
Briggs, Adam
Cummins, Steven
Penn-Jones, Catrin
Rayner, Mike
Rutter, Harry
Scarborough, Peter
Sharp, Stephen J
Smith, Richard D
White, Martin
Adams, Jean
author_sort Pell, David
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: To determine changes in household purchases of drinks and confectionery one year after implementation of the UK soft drinks industry levy (SDIL). DESIGN: Controlled interrupted time series analysis. PARTICIPANTS: Members of a panel of households reporting their purchasing on a weekly basis to a market research company (average weekly number of participants n=22 183), March 2014 to March 2019. INTERVENTION: A two tiered tax levied on manufacturers of soft drinks, announced in March 2016 and implemented in April 2018. Drinks with ≥8 g sugar/100 mL (high tier) are taxed at £0.24/L and drinks with ≥5 to <8 g sugar/100 mL (low tier) are taxed at £0.18/L. Drinks with <5 g sugar/100 mL (no levy) are not taxed. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Absolute and relative differences in the volume of, and amount of sugar in, soft drinks categories, all soft drinks combined, alcohol, and confectionery purchased per household per week one year after implementation of the SDIL compared with trends before the announcement of the SDIL. RESULTS: In March 2019, compared with the counterfactual estimated from pre-announcement trends, purchased volume of drinks in the high levy tier decreased by 155 mL (95% confidence interval 240.5 to 69.5 mL) per household per week, equivalent to 44.3% (95% confidence interval 59.9% to 28.7%), and sugar purchased in these drinks decreased by 18.0 g (95% confidence interval 32.3 to 3.6 g), or 45.9% (68.8% to 22.9%). Purchases of low tier drinks decreased by 177.3 mL (225.3 to 129.3 mL) per household per week, or 85.9% (95.1% to 76.7%), with a 12.5 g (15.4 to 9.5 g) reduction in sugar in these drinks, equivalent to 86.2% (94.2% to 78.1%). Despite no overall change in volume of no levy drinks purchased, there was an increase in sugar purchased of 15.3 g (12.6 to 17.9 g) per household per week, equivalent to 166.4% (94.2% to 238.5%). When all soft drinks were combined, the volume of drinks purchased did not change, but sugar decreased by 29.5 g (55.8 to 3.1 g), or 9.8% (17.9% to 1.8%). Purchases of confectionery and alcoholic drinks did not change. CONCLUSIONS: Compared with trends before the SDIL was announced, one year after implementation, the volume of soft drinks purchased did not change. The amount of sugar in those drinks was 30 g, or 10%, lower per household per week—equivalent to one 250 mL serving of a low tier drink per person per week. The SDIL might benefit public health without harming industry. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ISRCTN18042742.
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spelling pubmed-79443672021-03-24 Changes in soft drinks purchased by British households associated with the UK soft drinks industry levy: controlled interrupted time series analysis Pell, David Mytton, Oliver Penney, Tarra L Briggs, Adam Cummins, Steven Penn-Jones, Catrin Rayner, Mike Rutter, Harry Scarborough, Peter Sharp, Stephen J Smith, Richard D White, Martin Adams, Jean BMJ Research OBJECTIVE: To determine changes in household purchases of drinks and confectionery one year after implementation of the UK soft drinks industry levy (SDIL). DESIGN: Controlled interrupted time series analysis. PARTICIPANTS: Members of a panel of households reporting their purchasing on a weekly basis to a market research company (average weekly number of participants n=22 183), March 2014 to March 2019. INTERVENTION: A two tiered tax levied on manufacturers of soft drinks, announced in March 2016 and implemented in April 2018. Drinks with ≥8 g sugar/100 mL (high tier) are taxed at £0.24/L and drinks with ≥5 to <8 g sugar/100 mL (low tier) are taxed at £0.18/L. Drinks with <5 g sugar/100 mL (no levy) are not taxed. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Absolute and relative differences in the volume of, and amount of sugar in, soft drinks categories, all soft drinks combined, alcohol, and confectionery purchased per household per week one year after implementation of the SDIL compared with trends before the announcement of the SDIL. RESULTS: In March 2019, compared with the counterfactual estimated from pre-announcement trends, purchased volume of drinks in the high levy tier decreased by 155 mL (95% confidence interval 240.5 to 69.5 mL) per household per week, equivalent to 44.3% (95% confidence interval 59.9% to 28.7%), and sugar purchased in these drinks decreased by 18.0 g (95% confidence interval 32.3 to 3.6 g), or 45.9% (68.8% to 22.9%). Purchases of low tier drinks decreased by 177.3 mL (225.3 to 129.3 mL) per household per week, or 85.9% (95.1% to 76.7%), with a 12.5 g (15.4 to 9.5 g) reduction in sugar in these drinks, equivalent to 86.2% (94.2% to 78.1%). Despite no overall change in volume of no levy drinks purchased, there was an increase in sugar purchased of 15.3 g (12.6 to 17.9 g) per household per week, equivalent to 166.4% (94.2% to 238.5%). When all soft drinks were combined, the volume of drinks purchased did not change, but sugar decreased by 29.5 g (55.8 to 3.1 g), or 9.8% (17.9% to 1.8%). Purchases of confectionery and alcoholic drinks did not change. CONCLUSIONS: Compared with trends before the SDIL was announced, one year after implementation, the volume of soft drinks purchased did not change. The amount of sugar in those drinks was 30 g, or 10%, lower per household per week—equivalent to one 250 mL serving of a low tier drink per person per week. The SDIL might benefit public health without harming industry. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ISRCTN18042742. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2021-03-10 /pmc/articles/PMC7944367/ /pubmed/33692200 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.n254 Text en © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt and build upon this work, for commercial use, provided the original work is properly cited. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Research
Pell, David
Mytton, Oliver
Penney, Tarra L
Briggs, Adam
Cummins, Steven
Penn-Jones, Catrin
Rayner, Mike
Rutter, Harry
Scarborough, Peter
Sharp, Stephen J
Smith, Richard D
White, Martin
Adams, Jean
Changes in soft drinks purchased by British households associated with the UK soft drinks industry levy: controlled interrupted time series analysis
title Changes in soft drinks purchased by British households associated with the UK soft drinks industry levy: controlled interrupted time series analysis
title_full Changes in soft drinks purchased by British households associated with the UK soft drinks industry levy: controlled interrupted time series analysis
title_fullStr Changes in soft drinks purchased by British households associated with the UK soft drinks industry levy: controlled interrupted time series analysis
title_full_unstemmed Changes in soft drinks purchased by British households associated with the UK soft drinks industry levy: controlled interrupted time series analysis
title_short Changes in soft drinks purchased by British households associated with the UK soft drinks industry levy: controlled interrupted time series analysis
title_sort changes in soft drinks purchased by british households associated with the uk soft drinks industry levy: controlled interrupted time series analysis
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7944367/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33692200
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.n254
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