Press Release: Debunking Meat Myths doesn’t Last: The Short Shelf-Life of Truth

Posted on September 23, 2025 by Admin

Researchers tested a specific and relatively novel myth-busting technique called the "truth sandwich" on a quota-based representative sample of 537 German meat consumers. Study findings revealed that the truth sandwich method significantly reduced participants' agreement with common meat myths immediately after exposure, without causing unintended reinforcement (backfire effects, which recent research suggests are rare).

However, when the experiment was repeated following a two-week gap in the supply of debunked information, the previously observed corrective effect had faded and become statistically non-significant, suggesting that while the truth sandwich is a potent short-term myth-busting tool, lasting change requires more sustained strategies.

Study

The present study aims to address this communication breakdown by conducting the first long-term effectiveness study to assess the effectiveness of the recently proposed “truth sandwich” debunking technique, a three-part structure that starts with a fact, addresses and refutes the myth, and concludes by reinforcing the initial fact.

The study was conducted in two parts: 1. A preliminary study (n = 1,005; 496 women) to identify widely prevalent meat-associated myths, and 2. The main longitudinal experiment (n = 537; 263 women). The latter cohort was randomly subdivided into one of three groups. Two groups read a "truth sandwich" text specifically designed to debunk either the health myth or the environmental myth. The third group read a neutral control text about healthy eating.

Study methodology involved measuring the participants' agreement with the two most prevalent myths (identified from the first part of the study) on a 7-point scale across two time points: 1. ‘T1’ Immediately following an intervention explicitly designed to scientifically debunk the two most prevalent meat-associated myths (“Meat is a necessary part of a healthy diet” and “Meat is equally harmful to the environment as plant-based foods (e.g. tofu)”; and 2. ‘T2’ two weeks later, but without reexposure to corrected information.

Results

Descriptive statistics, bivariate Pearson's correlations, and four independent (time-point-specific) analyses of variance (ANOVAs) revealed that while the truth sandwich approach initially proved highly effective at correcting participants’ perceptions of meat-based myths without causing the backfire effect, this effect did not persist for two weeks.

At T1, participants who read the text debunking the health myth showed a significant drop in their agreement with it compared to the control group (mean agreement score of 3.49 vs. 4.62, p < .001; a medium-to-large effect size). Similarly, the environmental truth sandwich successfully reduced agreement with the environmental myth (mean score of 3.17 vs. 3.62, p = .033; a small to medium effect size).

However, by time T2 (two weeks later), the differences between the case and control groups had disappeared entirely. The belief in the myths among the intervention groups had "regressed," returning to levels statistically indistinguishable from the control group.

Furthermore, an evaluation of participants’ "trust in science" revealed that while people with higher trust in science scores were less likely to believe the myths at the study's initiation, this level of trust had no impact on the effectiveness of the truth sandwich approach. The technique worked just as well for science skeptics as it did for believers, but the effect faded for everyone.

Interestingly, participants rated the neutral control text (general dietary guidance from the German Nutrition Society) as more trustworthy and persuasive than the truth sandwich texts, likely because it contained familiar, common-sense recommendations.

Conclusion

The present study validates the truth sandwich approach as a potent, albeit incomplete format for correcting specific myths about meat consumption. While the technique can immediately correct individuals’ perspectives about a scientific fallacy without triggering the backfire effect, a one-off correction is insufficient to create lasting change.

Health organizations, dietitians, and science communicators may be able to leverage the truth sandwich approach for public messaging, but should ensure that information is delivered through trusted channels and repeated at key decision points (e.g., before food choices) to achieve longer-term impact.

Source:

https://www.news-medical.net/news/20250922/The-short-shelf-life-of-truth-Debunking-meat-myths-doesne28099t-last.aspx