4.3 Article

Assessing general public and policy influencer support for healthy public policies to promote healthy eating at the population level in two Canadian provinces

Journal

PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION
Volume 22, Issue 8, Pages 1492-1502

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S1368980018004068

Keywords

Healthy public policy; Chronic disease prevention; Healthy eating; Survey; Nuffield intervention ladder; Canada

Funding

  1. Canadian Partnership Against Cancer as part of the Coalitions Linking Action and Science
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  3. Public Health Agency of Canada
  4. Alberta Innovates - Health Solutions [CPP 137909]

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Objective To assess and compare the favourability of healthy public policy options to promote healthy eating from the perspective of members of the general public and policy influencers in two Canadian provinces. Design The Chronic Disease Prevention Survey, administered in 2016, required participants to rank their level of support for different evidence-based policy options to promote healthy eating at the population level. Pearson's chi(2) significance testing was used to compare support between groups for each policy option and results were interpreted using the Nuffield Council on Bioethics' intervention ladder framework. Setting Alberta and Quebec, Canada. Participants Members of the general public (n 2400) and policy influencers (n 302) in Alberta and Quebec. Results General public and policy influencer survey respondents were more supportive of healthy eating policies if they were less intrusive on individual autonomy. However, in comparing levels of support between groups, we found policy influencers indicated significantly stronger support overall for healthy eating policy options. We also found that policy influencers in Quebec tended to show more support for more restrictive policy options than their counterparts from Alberta. Conclusions These results suggest that additional knowledge brokering may be required to increase support for more intrusive yet impactful evidence-based policy interventions; and that the overall lower levels of support among members of the public may impede policy influencers from taking action on policies to promote healthy eating.

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