Economic costs and benefits of promoting healthy takeaway meals at workplace canteens

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Standard

Economic costs and benefits of promoting healthy takeaway meals at workplace canteens. / Jensen, Jørgen Dejgård; Mørkbak, Morten Raun; Nordström, Leif Jonas.

In: Journal of Benefit-Cost Analysis, Vol. 3, No. 4, 2012.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Jensen, JD, Mørkbak, MR & Nordström, LJ 2012, 'Economic costs and benefits of promoting healthy takeaway meals at workplace canteens', Journal of Benefit-Cost Analysis, vol. 3, no. 4. https://doi.org/10.1515/2152-2812.1116

APA

Jensen, J. D., Mørkbak, M. R., & Nordström, L. J. (2012). Economic costs and benefits of promoting healthy takeaway meals at workplace canteens. Journal of Benefit-Cost Analysis, 3(4). https://doi.org/10.1515/2152-2812.1116

Vancouver

Jensen JD, Mørkbak MR, Nordström LJ. Economic costs and benefits of promoting healthy takeaway meals at workplace canteens. Journal of Benefit-Cost Analysis. 2012;3(4). https://doi.org/10.1515/2152-2812.1116

Author

Jensen, Jørgen Dejgård ; Mørkbak, Morten Raun ; Nordström, Leif Jonas. / Economic costs and benefits of promoting healthy takeaway meals at workplace canteens. In: Journal of Benefit-Cost Analysis. 2012 ; Vol. 3, No. 4.

Bibtex

@article{842055991ad0484b90bc3b49bab1247b,
title = "Economic costs and benefits of promoting healthy takeaway meals at workplace canteens",
abstract = "Canteen Takeaway is a novel concept, which entails workplace canteens to utilise existing production capacity to supply packaged meals for employees to bring home. The concept has a potential to raise the average nutritional quality of employees' diets. The purpose of the study is to assess the economic net gains for users, and for society as a whole, of promoting healthy canteen takeaway meals, using Danish workplaces as an example. The analytical framework for the study combines direct cost analyses, users{\textquoteright} willingness to pay estimated through a choice experiment and cost-of-illness methods to assess the net society costs and benefits associated with an extended use of canteen takeaway meals as a health promotion strategy. The results show that employees have a positive willingness to pay for health attributes in canteen takeaway meals, but with a minority having a highly negative willingness to pay for the canteen takeaway concept. The potential health effects of a healthy canteen takeaway programme are estimated to be positive, but modest in magnitude. The estimated costs of providing healthy canteen takeaway meals exceed the sum of average direct and indirect benefits. In conclusion, healthy CTA programmes seems to be an economically sustainable intervention at some workplaces, though the analysis does not fully support a full-scale implementation of healthy CTA programmes at Danish workplaces from a welfare economic perspective. ",
keywords = "???F{\o}devare{\o}konomi???, cost-benefit analysis, DALY, choice experiment , canteen take-away meals, health",
author = "Jensen, {J{\o}rgen Dejg{\aa}rd} and M{\o}rkbak, {Morten Raun} and Nordstr{\"o}m, {Leif Jonas}",
note = "Article 2",
year = "2012",
doi = "10.1515/2152-2812.1116",
language = "English",
volume = "3",
journal = "Journal of Benefit-Cost Analysis",
issn = "2194-5888",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Economic costs and benefits of promoting healthy takeaway meals at workplace canteens

AU - Jensen, Jørgen Dejgård

AU - Mørkbak, Morten Raun

AU - Nordström, Leif Jonas

N1 - Article 2

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - Canteen Takeaway is a novel concept, which entails workplace canteens to utilise existing production capacity to supply packaged meals for employees to bring home. The concept has a potential to raise the average nutritional quality of employees' diets. The purpose of the study is to assess the economic net gains for users, and for society as a whole, of promoting healthy canteen takeaway meals, using Danish workplaces as an example. The analytical framework for the study combines direct cost analyses, users’ willingness to pay estimated through a choice experiment and cost-of-illness methods to assess the net society costs and benefits associated with an extended use of canteen takeaway meals as a health promotion strategy. The results show that employees have a positive willingness to pay for health attributes in canteen takeaway meals, but with a minority having a highly negative willingness to pay for the canteen takeaway concept. The potential health effects of a healthy canteen takeaway programme are estimated to be positive, but modest in magnitude. The estimated costs of providing healthy canteen takeaway meals exceed the sum of average direct and indirect benefits. In conclusion, healthy CTA programmes seems to be an economically sustainable intervention at some workplaces, though the analysis does not fully support a full-scale implementation of healthy CTA programmes at Danish workplaces from a welfare economic perspective.

AB - Canteen Takeaway is a novel concept, which entails workplace canteens to utilise existing production capacity to supply packaged meals for employees to bring home. The concept has a potential to raise the average nutritional quality of employees' diets. The purpose of the study is to assess the economic net gains for users, and for society as a whole, of promoting healthy canteen takeaway meals, using Danish workplaces as an example. The analytical framework for the study combines direct cost analyses, users’ willingness to pay estimated through a choice experiment and cost-of-illness methods to assess the net society costs and benefits associated with an extended use of canteen takeaway meals as a health promotion strategy. The results show that employees have a positive willingness to pay for health attributes in canteen takeaway meals, but with a minority having a highly negative willingness to pay for the canteen takeaway concept. The potential health effects of a healthy canteen takeaway programme are estimated to be positive, but modest in magnitude. The estimated costs of providing healthy canteen takeaway meals exceed the sum of average direct and indirect benefits. In conclusion, healthy CTA programmes seems to be an economically sustainable intervention at some workplaces, though the analysis does not fully support a full-scale implementation of healthy CTA programmes at Danish workplaces from a welfare economic perspective.

KW - ???Fødevareøkonomi???

KW - cost-benefit analysis

KW - DALY

KW - choice experiment

KW - canteen take-away meals

KW - health

U2 - 10.1515/2152-2812.1116

DO - 10.1515/2152-2812.1116

M3 - Journal article

VL - 3

JO - Journal of Benefit-Cost Analysis

JF - Journal of Benefit-Cost Analysis

SN - 2194-5888

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 43677957