Gain-framed messages increase relative importance of high-in labels on food choices in Brazilian adults
A randomized controlled trial examined how communication messages affect food choices in a population of Brazilian adults with a sample size of 1043 participants. Participants were exposed to gain-framed, loss-framed, neutral, or control conditions regarding high-in labels on food packaging.
The primary outcome measured the relative importance of high-in labels compared to brand and sensory claims. Exposure to messages increased this relative importance, particularly in the gain-framed condition where positive framing was used. Secondary outcomes assessed the influence of brand and sensory claims on choices; these factors remained most relevant across all conditions but showed reduced influence compared to control.
Safety data were not reported for adverse events, serious adverse events, discontinuations, or tolerability. The study did not report p-values, confidence intervals, absolute numbers, effect sizes, or specific directions of change beyond the qualitative description that exposure increased relative importance in gain-framed conditions.