Conceptualizing the commercial determinants of dietary behaviors associated with obesity: A systematic review using principles from critical interpretative synthesis

Abstract Introduction Unhealthy diet is an important preventable risk factor for overweight and obesity. Identifying the key drivers of an unhealthy diet is an important public health aim. “Big Food” has been identified as an influential factor shaping dietary behavior and obesity, and their practic...

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Main Authors: Yanaina Chavez‐Ugalde, Russell Jago, Zoi Toumpakari, Matt Egan, Steven Cummins, Martin White, Paige Hulls, Frank De Vocht
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-08-01
Series:Obesity Science & Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/osp4.507
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spelling doaj-5bd0cc1c61a649c598e2506f6eeed53f2021-08-07T03:03:17ZengWileyObesity Science & Practice2055-22382021-08-017447348610.1002/osp4.507Conceptualizing the commercial determinants of dietary behaviors associated with obesity: A systematic review using principles from critical interpretative synthesisYanaina Chavez‐Ugalde0Russell Jago1Zoi Toumpakari2Matt Egan3Steven Cummins4Martin White5Paige Hulls6Frank De Vocht7National Institute for Health Research School for Public Health Research Newcastle upon Tyne UKNational Institute for Health Research School for Public Health Research Newcastle upon Tyne UKCentre for Exercise, Nutrition & Health Sciences, School for Policy Studies University of Bristol Bristol UKNational Institute for Health Research School for Public Health Research Newcastle upon Tyne UKNational Institute for Health Research School for Public Health Research Newcastle upon Tyne UKNational Institute for Health Research School for Public Health Research Newcastle upon Tyne UKPopulation Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School University of Bristol Bristol UKNational Institute for Health Research School for Public Health Research Newcastle upon Tyne UKAbstract Introduction Unhealthy diet is an important preventable risk factor for overweight and obesity. Identifying the key drivers of an unhealthy diet is an important public health aim. “Big Food” has been identified as an influential factor shaping dietary behavior and obesity, and their practices have broadly been labeled as the “commercial determinants of obesity,” but there is a lack of definitions and conceptualizations for these terms. This review aimed to synthesize literature on the commercial determinants of dietary behavior associated with obesity. It presents the development of an integrative definition and a conceptual framework involving potential influences on dietary behavior, and it examines the prevalence of certain narratives within papers that focus on children and adolescents. Methods Four electronic databases (Ovid MEDLINE, PubMed, Web of Science, and Scopus) were searched up to December 2020. Eighty‐one articles met the inclusion criteria: they were published in a peer‐reviewed academic journal, described a practice from the food/beverage industry in relation to dietary behavior or obesity. Data were integrated using critical interpretative synthesis. Results The commercial determinants of dietary behavior are conceptualized in terms of three corporate spheres of action—political and legal; production, processing and design; and marketing and preference shaping—which enable powerful food industry to successfully pursue their business, market, and political objectives. The most frequently reported sphere of action targeting children and adolescents was marketing and preference shaping. Conclusions In the included literature, the commercial determinants of dietary behavior associated with obesity have been conceptualized as being part of a complex system where corporate practices are enabled by power structures. The proposed framework can facilitate a structured identification and systematic study of the impact of specific aspects of food industry's strategies and increase opportunities for primary prevention by anticipating industry responses and by discouraging corporate practices that harm health.https://doi.org/10.1002/osp4.507commercial determinants of obesitydietary behaviorfood industrypublic health
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yanaina Chavez‐Ugalde
Russell Jago
Zoi Toumpakari
Matt Egan
Steven Cummins
Martin White
Paige Hulls
Frank De Vocht
spellingShingle Yanaina Chavez‐Ugalde
Russell Jago
Zoi Toumpakari
Matt Egan
Steven Cummins
Martin White
Paige Hulls
Frank De Vocht
Conceptualizing the commercial determinants of dietary behaviors associated with obesity: A systematic review using principles from critical interpretative synthesis
Obesity Science & Practice
commercial determinants of obesity
dietary behavior
food industry
public health
author_facet Yanaina Chavez‐Ugalde
Russell Jago
Zoi Toumpakari
Matt Egan
Steven Cummins
Martin White
Paige Hulls
Frank De Vocht
author_sort Yanaina Chavez‐Ugalde
title Conceptualizing the commercial determinants of dietary behaviors associated with obesity: A systematic review using principles from critical interpretative synthesis
title_short Conceptualizing the commercial determinants of dietary behaviors associated with obesity: A systematic review using principles from critical interpretative synthesis
title_full Conceptualizing the commercial determinants of dietary behaviors associated with obesity: A systematic review using principles from critical interpretative synthesis
title_fullStr Conceptualizing the commercial determinants of dietary behaviors associated with obesity: A systematic review using principles from critical interpretative synthesis
title_full_unstemmed Conceptualizing the commercial determinants of dietary behaviors associated with obesity: A systematic review using principles from critical interpretative synthesis
title_sort conceptualizing the commercial determinants of dietary behaviors associated with obesity: a systematic review using principles from critical interpretative synthesis
publisher Wiley
series Obesity Science & Practice
issn 2055-2238
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Abstract Introduction Unhealthy diet is an important preventable risk factor for overweight and obesity. Identifying the key drivers of an unhealthy diet is an important public health aim. “Big Food” has been identified as an influential factor shaping dietary behavior and obesity, and their practices have broadly been labeled as the “commercial determinants of obesity,” but there is a lack of definitions and conceptualizations for these terms. This review aimed to synthesize literature on the commercial determinants of dietary behavior associated with obesity. It presents the development of an integrative definition and a conceptual framework involving potential influences on dietary behavior, and it examines the prevalence of certain narratives within papers that focus on children and adolescents. Methods Four electronic databases (Ovid MEDLINE, PubMed, Web of Science, and Scopus) were searched up to December 2020. Eighty‐one articles met the inclusion criteria: they were published in a peer‐reviewed academic journal, described a practice from the food/beverage industry in relation to dietary behavior or obesity. Data were integrated using critical interpretative synthesis. Results The commercial determinants of dietary behavior are conceptualized in terms of three corporate spheres of action—political and legal; production, processing and design; and marketing and preference shaping—which enable powerful food industry to successfully pursue their business, market, and political objectives. The most frequently reported sphere of action targeting children and adolescents was marketing and preference shaping. Conclusions In the included literature, the commercial determinants of dietary behavior associated with obesity have been conceptualized as being part of a complex system where corporate practices are enabled by power structures. The proposed framework can facilitate a structured identification and systematic study of the impact of specific aspects of food industry's strategies and increase opportunities for primary prevention by anticipating industry responses and by discouraging corporate practices that harm health.
topic commercial determinants of obesity
dietary behavior
food industry
public health
url https://doi.org/10.1002/osp4.507
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