Funding quality pre-kindergarten slots with Philadelphia's new "sugary drink tax': simulating effects of using an excise tax to address a social determinant of health
Authored by Brent A Langellier, Felice Le-Scherban, Jonathan Purtle
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1017/s1368980017001756
Sponsors:
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Platforms:
AnyLogic
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Objective: Philadelphia passed a 1.5-cent-per-ounce sweetened beverage
tax (SBT). Revenue will fund 10 000 quality pre-kindergarten slots for
poor children. It is imperative to understand how revenue from SBT can
be used to fund programmes to address education and other social
determinants of health. The objective of the present study was to
simulate quality pre-kindergarten attendance, educational achievement
and sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) consumption among Philadelphia
children and adolescents under six intervention scenarios: (i) no
intervention; (ii) 10 000 additional quality pre-kindergarten slots;
(iii) a 1 .5-cent-per-ounce SBT; (iv) expanded pre-kindergarten and 1
.5-cent-per-ounce SBT; (v) a 3-cent-per-ounce SBT; and (vi) expanded
pre-kindergarten and 3-cent-per-ounce SBT.
Design: We used an agent-based model to estimate pre-kindergarten
enrolment, educational achievement and SSB consumption under the six
policy scenarios. We identified key parameters in the model from the
published literature and secondary analyses of the Panel Study of Income
Dynamics -Child Development Supplement.
Setting: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Subjects: Philadelphia children and adolescents aged 4-18 years.
Results: A 1.5-cents-per-ounce tax would reduce SSB consumption by
1.3drinks/week among Philadelphia children and adolescents relative to
no intervention, with larger effects among children below the poverty
level. Quality pre-kindergarten expansion magnifies the effect of the
SBT by 8\%, but has the largest effect on moderate-income children just
above the poverty level. The SBT and quality pre-kindergarten programme
each reduce SSB consumption, but primarily benefit different children
and adolescents.
Conclusions: Pairing an excise tax with a complementary programme to
improve a social determinant of health represents a progressive strategy
to combat obesity, a disease regressive in its social patterning.
Tags
Education
Health Policy
Health disparities
childhood obesity
Interventions
Consumption
Prices
Social determinants of health
Beverage tax
Education and health
Sweetened beverages