Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
| Name | Class |
|---|---|
| Busara Center for Behavioral Economics | UNKNOWN |
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
This study seeks to promote consumption of locally sourced foods among school going children in Barbados. The study targets parents/care givers of school going children aged 18 years and below. Parents have been chosen as the target for this study because they shape the meals that their children consume through two primary routes; a) direct purchase of meal ingredients and b) political influence on school based meal programs. The study seeks to achieve this by first identifying the behavioral obstacles for consumption of locally sourced produce through exploratory and desk research and then designing interventions to address the obstacles.
This study will be rolled out as a digital interface experiment where the survey and intervention prompts will be programmed on OTree platform with pre-randomized assignments of the participants into either treatment or control groups. Busara Center for Behavioral Economics has partnered with a local organization named FutureBarbados who are part of the Government of Barbados. The organization will avail census data for parents with school going children below 18 years of age in Barbados. Busara will then randomly sample a pool of 1500 parents who will be sent a link to the programmed survey and intervention prompts to fill out. The process will entail first a consenting process which will be displayed on their phone screens upon opening the link. The consent information will outline clearly the purpose of their study, the length of the survey, data confidentiality, the voluntary nature of participation as well as contact information in the event they would like further clarification before making the decision to take part in the study.
Once the participants consent to take part in the study the survey will have been programmed to assign them the respective survey depending on the treatment or control assignment.
The assignments are as follows:
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Awareness Campaign | Experimental | Raise awareness among parents about how and why to use local produce in their kid's meals. |
|
| Online Shopping | Experimental | Provide information about an online shopping platform where the parents can shop for local produce online, and have it delivered, to disrupt their current ingredient-selection habits. |
|
| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Awareness campaign - communications campaign | Other | How this concept would work in a full deployment:
|
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Voucher Selection | Knowledge, attitudes and political support for local food, as well as a final measure of whether the respondent would rather receive a voucher for a store that sells local produce or a voucher for a store that sells imported food. Parents will be incentivized for their participation in the study with 10 Bajan Dollars for the purchase of food, and will be entered into a sweepstakes for 2000 Bajan Dollars (1,000 USD). At the end of the intervention given above, they are asked whether they would like a voucher for either:
The voucher selection is an incentive-compatible proxy for purchasing local produce or imported goods. This choice is made in full awareness of the frictions that parents face to sourcing produce from farmers markets, versus the ease of a supermarket: the study measures the impact of the interventions on behavior change in their real context, not in a hypothetical, friction-free choice environment. | Through study completion, an average of 1 year |
| Political support for prioritization of local food | Parents will be asked to rank order their preference for government policies among numerous (real) options -from job creation programs to climate change; embedded in that list will be a program for locally sourced produce for kids. Each arm's average ranking for the local produce option serves as the political support outcome measure. | Through study completion, an average of 1 year |
Not provided
Not provided
Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
- Parents /caregivers whose children are above 18 years old, do not live in Barbados and do not have access to a mobile phone
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
| Name | Role | Phone | Extension | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stephen Wendel, PhD | Contact | +254 715476334 | steve.wendel@busaracenter.org | |
| Indhira Ramirez, MSc | Contact | indhirar@iadb.org |
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D044342 | Malnutrition |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D009748 | Nutrition Disorders |
| D009750 | Nutritional and Metabolic Diseases |
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
|
| Online shopping | Other | Provide information on an online shopping site where the parents can shop for local produce online, and have it delivered to their homes, to disrupt their current ingredient-selection habits. Working backwards from a potential broad implementation, here we identify key risks along the path, and examine how to use the pilot to de-risk those areas. |
|