Citizen approval of nudging interventions promoting healthy eating: the role of intrusiveness and trustworthiness

Publication date

2018

Authors

Evers, CatharineISNI 0000000390372707
Marchiori, D.R.ISNI 0000000350315572
Junghans, A.F.ISNI 0000000506769571
Cremers, J.ISNI 0000000493299223
de Ridder, D.T.D.ISNI 0000000384941010

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Advisors

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Nudging interventions have lately been widely adopted by policy makers to increase the welfare of society and to help citizens make better choices. Hence, it has become important to understand the conditions under which they are approved. While most research has looked into whether professionals approve of nudging interventions, surprisingly the opinion of the target group has been widely ignored. This study investigated citizens' level of approval of nudging in the realm of healthy eating promotion, as well as its boundary conditions. METHODS: Participants (N = 1441) from the US and seven European countries were probed for their level of approval of nudges. Moreover, we investigated whether these levels of approval were dependent on the level of intrusiveness of the nudge and on the type and trustworthiness of the source (policy makers, experts, industry) implementing the nudge. RESULTS: People revealed moderate to high levels of approval with nudging across all countries. Intrusiveness and nudging approval were negatively associated. Nudges implemented by experts received more approval than those by policy makers. In general, approval increased with the trustworthiness of the source. CONCLUSIONS: These results provide information for European and American policy makers considering using nudging in their policy repertoire.

Keywords

Adult, Choice Behavior, Europe, Female, Health Promotion/methods, Healthy Diet/psychology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Public Opinion, Trust, United States

Citation

Evers, C, Marchiori, D R, Junghans, A F, Cremers, J & De Ridder, D T D 2018, 'Citizen approval of nudging interventions promoting healthy eating : the role of intrusiveness and trustworthiness', BMC Public Health, vol. 18, no. 1, 1182. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-018-6097-y