CI

At a glance

ClinicalIndex Comparison Record
N/ACompleted· 554 enrolled / 554 target
Drug / intervention
Choice architecture + repeated exposure +1 morebehavioral
Likely dose
Not stated in record
Structured eligibility isn't available for this trial yet — see the full criteria in the Eligibility tab below.

Standardized by ClinicalIndex from the ClinicalTrials.gov record · verify against the source.

Search/NCT04334525
NCT04334525N/ACompletedHigh Momentum (7.0/mo)Completion was 19mo ago

Promoting Healthier Eating Among Children in Restaurants

State University of New York at Buffalo·interventional·Posted Apr 6, 2020·Updated Jun 10, 2026

In Brief

A clinical study evaluating Choice architecture + repeated exposure and Active comparator for Diet, Healthy. Completed, enrolled 554 participants across 1 site.

Signals

Enrolling ahead of pace

Detailed Summary

Restaurants are normative eating contexts for many families. Restaurant meals tend to be higher in calories and lower in nutritional quality than those prepared at home. Targeting children's food selection in restaurants has the potential to improve diet quality, attenuate excess energy intake, and shape healthy habits. The objective of this study is to make healthier kids' meal options more appealing and easier to choose via an in-restaurant intervention that combines repeated exposure and choice architecture strategies. Six locations of a quick-service restaurant will be paired based on income levels in the surrounding census tracts. A location from each pair will be randomized to each study group (intervention, control). Recruitment and data collection will be conducted across 3 cohorts, with recruitment conducted during a family's regular visit. Study participation will involve 7 more visits to the location where the family was recruited, 6 of which will be during an exposure period of about 2 months. Families in intervention restaurants will receive placemats promoting healthier featured kids' meals. Participating families will also receive a frequent diner card which, after purchasing one of the featured healthier kids' meals across 6 occasions, makes them eligible for a free kids' meal of their choice during a predetermined redemption period. In the control group, generic placemats will be provided, and participating families will be provided with frequent diner cards that can be used for any kids' meals. The aims of this study are: (1) to test effects of a healthier kids' meal intervention on children's meal orders, and (2) to test effects of a healthier kids' meal intervention on children's dietary intake. It is hypothesized that (1a) children in the intervention restaurants will be more likely than controls to select one of the promoted healthier kids' meals at post-test, (1b) children in the intervention group will order fewer calories and desserts and less saturated fat, sodium, and sugar at post-test versus controls, (1c) the promoted healthier meals will make up a greater percentage of kids' meals ordered in intervention restaurants versus controls, based on sales data across the study period, and (2) compared to controls, children in the intervention group will consume fewer calories and less saturated fat, sodium, and sugar in the restaurant at post-test.

Study Details

Study Typeinterventional
Allocation--
Masking--
Primary Purpose--
ConditionsDiet, Healthy
CountriesUnited States

Timeline

N/ACompletedFinished
2020202120222023202420252026
First PostedApr 6, 2020
Enrollment StartNov 13, 2019
Primary CompletionNov 22, 2024
Study CompletionNov 24, 2024
TodayJul 2, 2026
Enrollment to primary: 5.0 yearsPosted 6.2 years ago

Arms & Interventions

Generic placemats and frequent diner cardsactive_comparator

Participants will receive generic placemats listing all of the restaurant's kids' meals. Families will also receive a generic frequent diner card, which after purchasing (any) kids' meals across 6 occasions, makes them eligible for a free kids' meal of their choice during a predetermined redemption period. Corresponding signage will be displayed in the restaurant.

Behavioral: Active comparator
Placemats and frequent diner cards promoting healthier mealsexperimental

Participants will receive placemats promoting healthier featured kids' meals and the opportunity to redeem their kids' meal token for a toy instead of dessert. Families will also receive a frequent diner card, which after purchasing one of the featured healthier kids' meals across 6 occasions, makes them eligible for a free kids' meal of their choice during a predetermined redemption period. Corresponding signage will be displayed in the restaurant.

Behavioral: Choice architecture + repeated exposure
Pilot phaseno_intervention

Pilot (taste testing) phase completed before the trial to finalize the healthier meals that would be promoted in the intervention.

Interventions

Choice architecture + repeated exposurebehavioral

Participants will receive placemats promoting healthier featured kids' meals and the opportunity to redeem their kids' meal token for a toy instead of dessert. Families will also receive a frequent diner card, which after purchasing one of the featured healthier kids' meals across 6 occasions, makes them eligible for a free kids' meal of their choice during a predetermined redemption period.

Active comparatorbehavioral

Participants receive generic placemats and frequent diner cards that do not promote any specific kids' meal.