Jose Luis Vazquez Martinez

Glassware design and drinking behaviours: a review of impact and mechanisms using a new typology of drinking behaviours

Jose Luis Vazquez Martinez - 30 November 2020

Source:

Tess Langfield , Rachel Pechey , Mark A. Pilling & Theresa M. Marteau (2020): Glassware design and drinking behaviours: a review of impact and mechanisms using a new typology of drinking behaviours, Health Psychology Review, DOI: 10.1080/17437199.2020.1842230

 

ABSTRACT

Much of the global burden of disease is attributable to unhealthy behaviour, including excessive consumption of alcohol and sugar-sweetened beverages. Developing effective methods to change these drinking behaviours could inform policies to improve population health. In line with an increasing interest in environmental-level interventions – i.e., changing the environment in which a behaviour occurs in order to change the behaviour of interest – this review first describes the existing evidence of the impact of glassware design (including capacity and shape) on drinking behaviours (e.g., at the ‘micro’ level – including sip size, as well as at the macro level – including amount consumed). The roles of two sets of possible underlying mechanisms – perception and affordance – are also explored. Finally, this review sets out a provisional typology of drinking behaviours to enable more systematic approaches to the study of these behaviours. While there is a paucity of evidence – in particular on measures of consumption – this growing evidence base suggests promising targets for novel interventions involving glassware design to reduce the consumption of drinks that harm health.

Trial registration: ISRCTN.org identifier: ISRCTN10456720.