| Literature DB >> 23672409 |
Lukar E Thornton1, Adrian J Cameron, Sarah A McNaughton, Wilma E Waterlander, Marita Sodergren, Chalida Svastisalee, Laurence Blanchard, Angela D Liese, Sarah Battersby, Mary-Ann Carter, Judy Sheeshka, Sharon I Kirkpatrick, Sandy Sherman, Gill Cowburn, Charlie Foster, David A Crawford.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cross-country differences in dietary behaviours and obesity rates have been previously reported. Consumption of energy-dense snack foods and soft drinks are implicated as contributing to weight gain, however little is known about how the availability of these items within supermarkets varies internationally. This study assessed variations in the display of snack foods and soft drinks within a sample of supermarkets across eight countries.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23672409 PMCID: PMC3660266 DOI: 10.1186/1479-5868-10-56
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act ISSN: 1479-5868 Impact factor: 6.457
Sample characteristics of the 170 included supermarkets from 8 countries
| Australia | Melbourne | 35 | Coles (16), Woolworths (19) | Sept 2010 – Nov 2010 & Feb 2011 |
| Canada | Montreal (18); Toronto (10) | 28 | Food Basics (1), Highland Farms (1), IGA (2), IGA Extra (2), Les Marchés Traditions (1), Loblaws Superstore (1), Longo’s (1), Marché Ami (1), Métro (8), Métro Plus (2), Michael-Angelo’s (1), No Frills (1), Price Chopper (1), Provigo (4), Super C (1) | Nov 2011, Jan 2012 & June 2012 |
| Denmark | Copenhagen and surrounding areas | 18 | Fakta (4), Fotex (1), Irma (3), Lidl (1), Netto (3), Rema 1000 (1), Spar (1), Superbest (3) | Aug- Sept 2011 |
| Netherlands | Amsterdam | 20 | Albert Heijn (20) | May – June 2011 |
| New Zealand | Wellington | 10 | Countdown (3), New World (5), Pak n Save (2) | July 2012 |
| Sweden | Stockholm | 19 | Coop (8), ICA (11) | July 2011 & June 2012 |
| United Kingdom | Oxford | 8 | Co-op (1), Marks and Spencer (1), Sainsbury (3), Tesco (2), Waitrose (1) | Feb 2012 |
| United States of America | Columbia (14); Philadelphia (9); Bethesda/Washington DC (9) | 32 | Acme (1), Bi-Lo (3), Bottom Dollar (1), Fresh Grocer (2), Fresh Market (1), Food Lion (5), Giant (4), Harris Teeter (2), Kroger (1), Piggly Wiggly (3), Safeway (4), Sams (1), Save a Lot (1), Shop n Bag (1), Superfresh (1), Trader Joes (1) | June-July 2012 |
Shelf space (aisle length in metres) dedicated to energy-dense snack foods and drinks (adjusted for total store size) and ratio of snack food to fruits and vegetables and between-country rankings for each item
| Australia2 | 12.5 (10.8-14.1) | 10.0 (8.6-11.4) | 5.28 (3.8-6.8) | 18.4 (16.6-20.3) | 45.8 (41.4-50.1) | 0.58 (0.4-0.7) | 262.2 (238.6-285.7) |
| (rank) | |||||||
| Canada | 13.9 (12.1-15.7) | 4.91 (3.4-6.4) | 3.51 (1.9-5.1) | 12.6 (10.6-14.6) | 34.9 (30.2-39.6) | 0.33 (0.1-0.5) | 188.3 (158.8-217.8) |
| (rank) | |||||||
| Denmark | 11.3 (9.1-13.6) | 7.92 (6.0-9.9) | 7.27 (5.2-9.3) | 12.2 (9.7-14.7) | 38.7 (32.7-44.7) | 1.46 (1.3-1.6) | 128.3 (94.7-161.9) |
| (rank) | |||||||
| Netherlands | 10.6 (8.3-12.9) | 5.31 (3.38-7.2) | 3.85 (1.8-5.9) | 11.1 (8.61-13.6) | 30.5 (24.6-36.4) | 0.44 (0.2-0.6) | 76.9 (59.3-94.6) |
| (rank) | |||||||
| New Zealand | 7.17 (4.3-10.2) | 2.32 (-0.2-4.9) | 3.98 (1.3-6.7) | 8.20 (4.8-11.5) | 21.7 (13.8-29.7) | 0.50 (0.4-0.7) | 279.9 (212.0-347.7) |
| (rank) | |||||||
| Sweden | 14.5 (12.2-16.8) | 9.23 (7.3-11.1) | 9.33 (7.3-11.3) | 10.8 (8.3-13.3) | 43.8 (37.8-49.8) | 0.72 (0.5-0.9) | 93.4 (59.9-126.8) |
| (rank) | |||||||
| United Kingdom | 15.2 (11.8-18.5) | 15.6 (12.7-18.4) | 11.6 (8.6-14.6) | 13.9 (10.2-17.7) | 56.4 (47.6-65.2) | 1.31 (1.0-1.6) | 232.0 (39.8-424.2) |
| (rank) | |||||||
| United States of America | 12.9 (11.1-14.7) | 2.87 (1.3-4.4) | 2.81 (1.2-4.4) | 14.0 (12.0-16.0) | 32.7 (28.0-37.5) | 0.56 (0.4-0.7) | 307.8 (212.0-347.7) |
| (rank) | |||||||
1 adjusted for store size.
2 shelf space reported in our previous analysis of Australian supermarkets [43] will differ to the results presented here as the current analysis accounts for differences in store size between countries.
Figure 1Proportion of total snack food aisle length dedicated to each snack food item.
Figure 2Mean within-store percentage (and 95% CI) of checkouts and end-of-aisle displays with any snack food present.