AI Article Synopsis

  • Impulsivity is linked to making poor food choices, with nudge interventions potentially helping high impulsivity individuals improve their diets.
  • A study involving 487 hospital employees examined how different types of impulsivity affect the success of a 12-month nudge intervention aimed at promoting healthier cafeteria food purchases.
  • Results showed that while all employees increased healthy eating, those with higher trait impulsivity had smaller gains in healthy purchases, but the intervention reduced weight gain among those with high action impulsivity.

Article Abstract

Impulsivity is associated with unhealthy food choices. Nudge interventions in the food environment may be particularly helpful for individuals with high impulsivity. To examine if trait, choice, and action impulsivity were associated with the effectiveness of a workplace-based nudge intervention to improve diet and weight. This was a planned secondary analysis of 487 participants of ChooseWell 365, a randomized controlled trial that tested a 12-month nudge intervention to improve cafeteria purchases among hospital employees. Trait impulsivity was measured with the Barratt Impulsiveness Scale. Choice and action impulsivity were assessed with delay discounting and response inhibition tasks, respectively. Tertiles were generated for each measure. Multivariable regression models examined the association of impulsivity with cafeteria purchases [Healthy Purchasing Score (HPS)] over 12 months, dietary intake [Healthy Eating Index-2015 (HEI) score], and body mass index (BMI) measured at 12 months. Interaction terms tested differences in intervention effect by level of impulsivity. Participants with higher trait (p = .02) and choice (p < .001) impulsivity had lower baseline HPS than those with lower impulsivity. Employees of all impulsivity levels increased healthy eating, but higher trait impulsivity was associated with smaller increase in HPS over 12 months (p = .03). In the highest action impulsivity tertile, 12-month BMI increased less for intervention vs. control participants (0.3 vs. 0.5 kg/m2; p-interaction = .04). There were no interaction effects for trait or choice impulsivity. A workplace nudge intervention improved food choices among employees of all impulsivity levels and attenuated weight gain in those with higher action impulsivity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10182420PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/tbm/ibac103DOI Listing

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