Taxing fat versus behavioural interventions: Multiple discrete–continuous extreme value (MDCEV) models and the PCSHOP randomized trial of shopping behaviour
Metadatos
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Elsevier
Materia
Multiple Discrete-Continuous Extreme Value (MDCEV) Randomized controlled trial Shopping behaviour
Fecha
2025-03-20Referencia bibliográfica
J. Buckell et al. Food Policy 132 (2025) 102836 [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodpol.2025.102836]
Patrocinador
Nuffield Department of Population Health, University of Oxford - Oxford Biomedical Research Centre; NIHR ARC RYC2020-028818-I; MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033; "ESF Investing in your future", Ministry of Science and Innovation, Spain; European Research Council (ERC) 101020940-SYNERGY; European Research Council through the advanced grant 615596-DECISIONS 875692-APOLLOResumen
Understanding food purchasing behaviours is complex because people make both choices among goods and
volumes of those goods that they choose. We use the novel Multiple Discrete-Continuous Extreme Value
(MDCEV) model, capable of handling both aspects of behaviour, on real-world food shopping behaviour data
from a clinical trial. We compared the impact of providing general dietary advice, general dietary advice plus
personalised shopping advice, or taxation, and combinations thereof, on the amount of saturated fat in consumers’
shopping baskets, using simulation. We used supermarket loyalty card data from a randomized
controlled trial of 111 adults with raised cholesterol in Oxfordshire (UK). A Danish fat tax simulation alone is less
effective than the tax in combination with dietary and shopping advice. These data illustrate the potential of
MDCEV models for these behaviours and, by extension, informing food policies.