# Promoting CHANGE cluster randomised controlled trial to improve food outlet healthiness in Australian sport and recreation facilities: protocol

**Authors:** Neha Lalchandani, Helena Romaniuk, Adrian Cameron, Liliana Orellana, Jaithri Ananthapavan, A Peeters, Bettina Backman, Megan Adam, Steven Allender, Phuong Nguyen, Gary Sacks, Julie Kay Brimblecombe, Emma McMahon, Miranda Blake

PMC · DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2025-109584 · 2026-03-11

## TL;DR

This study tests a program to help local governments improve the healthiness of food sold in sports and recreation facilities in Australia.

## Contribution

The novel contribution is a co-designed support package to help local governments implement and sustain healthier food offerings.

## Key findings

- The trial will assess the effectiveness of a support package in improving food healthiness in sports and recreation facilities.
- Findings will evaluate scalability and cost-effectiveness of the initiative across multiple local governments in Australia.

## Abstract

Food retail outlets in sports and recreation facilities often fail to support healthy eating, despite aligning with healthy lifestyles and goals of local governments (LGs) that often own or manage them. LGs face barriers to implementing facility changes including inadequate staffing, training and incentives. The Promoting CHANGE initiative was co-designed to support LGs in improving and sustaining healthier food and drink offerings in these settings.

A 3-year, type 2 effectiveness-implementation hybrid cluster randomised controlled trial will evaluate the Promoting CHANGE capacity-building and support package in three Intervention and four Control LGs in Victoria, Australia (August 2023–July 2026). The co-designed initiative includes human resource support, training, tools, technical assistance, community-of-practice groups, feedback based on food outlet audit and sales data and small grant incentives. Using the RE-AIM (Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, Maintenance) evaluation framework, the trial’s co-primary outcomes are the percentage of least healthiest food and drinks (1) displayed (implementation) and (2) sold weekly (effectiveness). Key secondary outcomes are effectiveness (sales and revenue); facility-level adoption, implementation, maintenance of healthy changes; cost-effectiveness (within-trial modelled economic evaluation). Findings will provide evidence of the initiative’s effectiveness and scalability, informing recommendations for advancing healthier food environments in over 6000 community-based food outlets across 500 Australian LGs, with implications globally.

This study has received approval from the Deakin University Human Research Ethics Committee (reference number HEAG-H 92_2023). The results will be published in scientific peer-reviewed journals along with plain language summaries for participants.

ACTRN12621001120864.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12983731/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12983731