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  Newsmakers   ‘Healthy foods’ make people eat more, turn obese

‘Healthy foods’ make people eat more, turn obese

PTI
Published : Dec 29, 2015, 12:56 am IST
Updated : Dec 29, 2015, 12:56 am IST

When people eat “healthy food”, they tend to consume more than the recommended serving size because they associate “healthy” with less filling, researchers, including one of Indian-origin, have found.

Representative image
 Representative image

When people eat “healthy food”, they tend to consume more than the recommended serving size because they associate “healthy” with less filling, researchers, including one of Indian-origin, have found.

Eating too much is typically considered one of the prime culprits of obesity. The study looked specifically at overconsumption of “healthy” foods which consumers often perceive as less filling. The research at the University of Texas at Austin utilises a multi-method approach to study the “healthy equals less filling” intuition. The first study was conducted with 50 undergraduate students at a large public university and employed the well-established Implicit Association Test to provide evidence for an inverse relationship between the concepts of healthy and filling.

The second was a field study conducted with 40 graduate students at a large public university and measured participants’ hunger levels after consuming a cookie that is either portrayed as healthy or unhealthy to test the effect of health portrayals on experienced hunger levels. The third study was conducted with 72 undergraduate students to measure the impact of health portrayals on the amount of food ordered before watching a short film and the actual amount of food consumed during the film.

The researchers, including Raj Raghunathan from the University of Texas at Austin demonstrate that portraying a food as healthy as opposed to unhealthy using a front-of-package nutritional scale impacts consumer judgement and behaviour. When a food is portrayed as healthy, as opposed to unhealthy, consumers order greater portion sizes of the food and consume greater amounts of the food. Surprisingly, even consumers who say they disagree with the idea that healthy foods are less filling than unhealthy foods are subject to the same biases, the researchers said. These findings add to the burgeoning body of work on the psychological causes of weight-gain and obesity and point to a way of overturning the pernicious effects of the “healthy equ-als less filling” assumption, researchers said.

Location: United States, New York