Abstract

SummaryThere is an increasing policy commitment to address the avoidable burdens of unhealthy diet, overweight and obesity. However, to design effective policies, it is important to understand why people make unhealthy dietary choices. Research from behavioural economics suggests a critical role for time discounting, which describes how people's value of a reward, such as better health, decreases with delay to its receipt. We systematically reviewed the literature on the relationship of time discounting with unhealthy diets, overweight and obesity in Web of Science and PubMed. We identified 41 studies that met our inclusion criteria as they examined the association between time discount rates and (i) unhealthy food consumption; (ii) overweight and (iii) response to dietary and weight loss interventions. Nineteen out of 25 cross‐sectional studies found time discount rates positively associated with overweight, obesity and unhealthy diets. Experimental studies indicated that lower time discounting was associated with greater weight loss. Findings varied by how time discount rates were measured; stronger results were observed for food than monetary‐based measurements. Network co‐citation analysis revealed a concentration of research in nutrition journals. Overall, there is moderate evidence that high time discounting is a significant risk factor for unhealthy diets, overweight and obesity and may serve as an important target for intervention. © 2016 The Authors Obesity Reviews published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of International Association for the Study of Obesity (IASO)

Highlights

  • Overweight and obesity contribute to a number of chronic non-communicable diseases and are among the leading risk factors for death and disability worldwide [1]

  • Because unhealthy diets are linked to overweight or obesity, researchers hypothesize that higher time discount rates are associated with being overweight or obese and poor response to weight loss interventions [23]

  • We included studies that examined the association between time discount rates and (i) unhealthy food consumption; (ii) overweight and obesity and (iii) response to interventions aimed at reducing unhealthy food consumption and body weight

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Overweight and obesity contribute to a number of chronic non-communicable diseases and are among the leading risk factors for death and disability worldwide [1]. Because unhealthy diets are linked to overweight or obesity, researchers hypothesize that higher time discount rates are associated with being overweight or obese and poor response to weight loss interventions [23]. We included studies that examined the association between time discount rates and (i) unhealthy food consumption; (ii) overweight and obesity and (iii) response to interventions aimed at reducing unhealthy food consumption and body weight.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call