Abstract | dc.description.abstract | Background In 2016, Chile implemented a unique law mandating front-of-package warning labels, restricting
marketing, and banning school sales for products high in calories, sodium, sugar, or saturated fat. We aimed to
examine changes in the calorie, sugar, sodium, and saturated fat content of food and beverage purchases after the first
phase of implementation of this law.
Methods This before and after study used longitudinal data on food and beverage purchases from 2381 Chilean
households from Jan 1, 2015, to Dec 31, 2017. Nutrition facts panel data from food and beverage packages were linked
to household purchases at the product level using barcode, brand name, and product description. Nutritionists
reviewed each product for nutritional accuracy and categorised it as high-in if it contained added sugar, sodium, or
saturated fat and exceeded phase 1 nutrient or calorie thresholds, and thus was subject to the labelling, marketing,
and school regulations. Using fixed-effects models, we examined the mean nutrient content (overall calories, sugar,
saturated fat, and sodium) of purchases in the post-policy period compared to a counterfactual scenario based on prepolicy
trends.
Findings Compared with the counterfactual scenario, overall calories purchased declined by 16·4 kcal/capita/day
(95% CI –27·3 to –5·6; p=0·0031) or 3·5%. Overall sugar declined by 11·5 kcal/capita/day (–14·6 to –8·4; p<0·0001)
or 10·2%, and saturated fat declined by 2·2 kcal/capita/day (–3·8 to –0·5; p=0·0097) or 3·9%. The sodium content of
overall purchases declined by 27·7 mg/capita/day (–46·3 to –9·1; p=0·0035) or 4·7%. Declines from high-in purchases
drove these results with some offset by increases in not-high-in purchases. Among high-in purchases, relative
to the counterfactual scenario, there were notable declines of 23·8% in calories purchased (–49·4 kcal/capita/day,
95% CI –55·1 to –43·7; p<0·0001), 36·7% in sodium purchased (–96·6 mg/capita/day,–105·3 to –87·8; p<0·0001),
and 26·7% in sugar purchased (–20·7 kcal/capita/day, –23·4 to –18·1; p<0·0001).
Interpretation The Chilean phase 1 law of food labelling and advertising policies were associated with reduced high-in
purchases, leading to declines in purchased nutrients of concern. Greater changes might reasonably be anticipated
after the implementation of phases 2 and 3.
Funding Bloomberg Philanthropies, International Development Research Center, and Eunice Kennedy Shriver
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development of the National Institutes of Health. | es_ES |