• Adding a meter between meals boosts vege

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Thu Aug 13 21:30:38 2020
    Adding a meter between meals boosts vegetarian appeal

    Date:
    August 13, 2020
    Source:
    University of Cambridge
    Summary:
    Researchers have identified the optimal dish positions to help
    ''nudge'' diners into picking more planet-friendly meals in
    cafeterias.



    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Meat-heavy diets not only risk our health but that of the planet, as
    livestock farming on a massive scale destroys habitats and generates
    greenhouse gases.


    ========================================================================== Conservationists at the University of Cambridge are investigating ways
    of "nudging" people towards eating more plants and less meat, to help
    curb the environmental damage caused by excessive consumption of animal products.

    The researchers experimented on customers in the cafeterias of two
    Cambridge colleges to find out whether the position of vegetarian options influences the uptake of plant-based dining.

    They collected and analysed data from 105,143 meal selections over a
    two-year period, alternating the placement of meat and veg dishes every
    week, and then changing the pattern to every month.

    The size of the study is unprecedented. A previous review of various
    studies using "choice architecture" to reduce meat intake only reached
    a combined total of 11,290 observations.

    The researchers found that simply placing veggie before meat in the
    order of meal options as people entered the serving area did little to
    boost green eating in one of the colleges.



    ==========================================================================
    In the other college, however, the sales of plant-based dishes shot up
    by a quarter (25.2%) in the weekly analysis, and by almost 40% (39.6)
    in the monthly comparison.

    The difference: almost a metre of added distance between the vegetarian
    and meat options, with an 85cm gap in the first college compared to a
    181cm gap in the second. The findings are published today in the journal
    Nature Food.

    "Reducing meat and dairy consumption is one of the simplest and most
    impactful choices we can make to protect the climate, environment and
    other species," said study lead author Emma Garnett, a conservationist
    from Cambridge's Department of Zoology.

    "We've got to make better choices easier for people. We hope to see
    these findings used by catering managers and indeed anyone interested in cafeteria and menu design that promotes more climate friendly diets."
    The latest research follows on from work by Garnett and colleagues
    published last autumn, which showed that adding an extra veggie option
    in cafeterias cuts meat consumption without denting overall sales.



    ========================================================================== Livestock and aquacultures behind meat, fish, dairy and eggs are
    responsible for some 58% of the greenhouse gas created by global food,
    and take up 83% of farmland despite contributing to just 18% of the
    world's calorie intake.

    Recently, Cambridge researchers recommended eating less meat to reduce
    the risk of future pandemics, and the UK's public sector caterers pledged
    to cut the amount of meat used in schools and hospitals by 20%.

    The experiments were conducted across two colleges -- one with 600
    students and one with 900 students -- where cafeteria customers were
    presented with vegetarian and meat options in differing orders for
    weekday lunch and dinner.

    College members take a tray, view the meals on offer, and then ask
    serving staff to dish up their preferred options. Food is purchased by
    swiping a university card, and the researchers gathered anonymised data
    on main meal selections only (sandwiches and salads went uncounted).

    While the catering managers helped to set the experiments up, the diners remained unaware.

    The researchers had expected to see a difference in vegetarian sales
    through order alone, but it was only in the college with the extra metre
    -- the 181cm gap -- between food options that recorded an uptick when
    arranged "Veg First." To confirm the findings, researchers reduced the
    gap in this cafeteria to just 67cm, and vegetarian sales fell sharply. In
    fact, with such a small gap, vegetarian dishes fared even worse when
    put first in line (falling almost 30% compared to "Meat First" days).

    "We think the effect of the metre may be down to the additional effort
    required to seek out meat. If the first bite is with the eye, then many
    people seem perfectly happy with an appetising veggie option when meat
    is harder to spot," said Garnett.

    "All cafeterias and restaurants have a design that 'nudges' people towards something. So it is sensible to use designs that make the healthiest
    and most sustainable food options the easiest to pick without thinking
    about it," she said.

    "We know that information alone is generally not enough to get us to
    change damaging habits. More research is needed on how to set up our
    society so that the self-interested default decision is the best one for
    the climate." Garnett's research has contributed to food policy at the University of Cambridge, where the catering service has worked to reduce
    the amount of meat it uses.

    Last year, University cafeterias (separate from the colleges) announced
    a 33% reduction in carbon emissions per kilogram of food purchased,
    and a 28% reduction in land use per kilogram of food purchased.


    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by University_of_Cambridge. The original
    story is licensed under a Creative_Commons_License. Note: Content may
    be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Emma E. Garnett, Theresa M. Marteau, Chris Sandbrook, Mark
    A. Pilling,
    Andrew Balmford. Order of meals at the counter and distance between
    options affect student cafeteria vegetarian sales. Nature Food,
    2020; 1 (8): 485 DOI: 10.1038/s43016-020-0132-8 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/08/200813111131.htm

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