Summary: In this 2×2 factorial cluster randomised trial of 284 adults with type 2 diabetes and overweight or obesity across 12 Chinese primary care settings, nudge-based dietary education reduced HbA1c by 0.76 percent (p<0.001) and nudge-supportive tableware by 0.33 percent (p=0.042) at 6 months, with an additive 1.04 percent reduction (p<0.001) when combined. Effects were achieved without increasing psychological burden.
PICO Summary
| Element | Detail |
|---|---|
| Population | 284 adults with type 2 diabetes and overweight or obesity (mean age 52.3 years, 54.3 percent male); 2×2 factorial cluster RCT across 12 primary healthcare settings in China (pre-registered ChiCTR2100044471). |
| Intervention | Nudge-based dietary education (NE) and/or nudge-supportive tableware (NT), delivered as four cluster arms: NE alone, NT alone, and combined NE plus NT, assessed over a 6-month follow-up. |
| Comparison | Non-nudge counterparts: control dietary education (CE) and control tableware (CT), with the full-control arm receiving CE plus CT. |
| Outcome | Primary outcome HbA1c at 6 months: NE -0.76 percent (p<0.001) and NT -0.33 percent (p=0.042) versus controls; combined NE plus NT -1.04 percent (p<0.001), an additive but non-interactive effect. Secondary improvements were seen in total calorie, macronutrient and vegetable intake, fasting blood glucose, plasma lipids and BMI; NE additionally reduced diabetes distress and improved self-efficacy. Confidence intervals and absolute risk reduction or NNT were not reported in the abstract. |
Dietary Nudges and Tableware in T2DM
2x2 cluster RCT · type 2 diabetes + obesity · 6 months
Combining nudge-based dietary education with portion-control tableware lowered HbA1c by 1.04 percent at 6 months, an additive effect, without raising psychological burden.
Expert Commentary
This trial offers reasonable evidence that behavioural nudges can meaningfully support glycaemic control as an adjunct to usual diabetes care. The headline finding, a 1.04 percent HbA1c reduction in the combined arm, is clinically substantial and is reinforced by consistent secondary gains in dietary intake, fasting glucose, lipids and BMI. The factorial design is a genuine strength, since it allows the independent contributions of education and tableware to be separated and shows they add rather than multiply. The dominant limitation is that a dietary education and tableware intervention cannot be blinded, so this is an open-label study in which participant expectation and self-reported dietary behaviour may inflate apparent benefit, although HbA1c is an objective anchor that is harder to bias. Generalisability is also constrained to a single-country primary care population, and the abstract reports neither confidence intervals nor an absolute risk framing. No commercial tableware manufacturer sponsorship is declared in the indexed record, and the effect sizes are plausible rather than implausibly large. Can I use this with my patients? Cautiously yes, for motivated adults with type 2 diabetes and obesity already engaged in lifestyle change, portion-control tableware and structured education are low-cost, low-harm additions worth trialling. Confirmation in blinded-outcome, longer and more diverse cohorts is now warranted.
References
Long T, Zhang Y, Zhang Y, Wu Y, Huang J, Jiang H, et al. Making diet management easier: the effects of nudge-based dietary education and tableware in individuals with both T2DM and overweight/obesity: a 2 x 2 cluster randomized controlled trial. Nutrients. 2025;17(9):1574. doi:10.3390/nu17091574
