| Literature DB >> 28222818 |
Nadine Budd1, Jayne K Jeffries2, Jessica Jones-Smith3, Anna Kharmats4, Ann Yelmokas McDermott4, Joel Gittelsohn4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Small food store interventions show promise to increase healthy food access in under-resourced areas. However, none have tested the impact of price discounts on healthy food supply and demand. We tested the impact of store-directed price discounts and communications strategies, separately and combined, on the stocking, sales and prices of healthier foods and on storeowner psychosocial factors.Entities:
Keywords: Food access interventions; Food stores; Obesity; Pricing interventions; Trade promotions
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28222818 PMCID: PMC5725746 DOI: 10.1017/S1368980017000064
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Public Health Nutr ISSN: 1368-9800 Impact factor: 4.022
Fig. 1CONSORT (Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials) flow diagram
B’More Healthy Retail Rewards (BHRR) intervention components and phases
| Communications examples (12 stores) | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||||
| Phase | Duration | Objectives | Interactive displays | Educational | Posters | Shelf labels | Giveaways | Promoted food discounts (12 stores) |
| 1: Better Beverages | 10 weeks; Feb–Apr 2013 |
Lower-calorie drink alternatives Replace soda with water Switch to low-fat milk | ‘Rethink your drink!’ | ‘How does your drink measure up?’ | ‘Replace one bottle of XX with water each day to lose XX lbs per year!’ | ‘Refresh!’ | Drink tumblers with BHRR logo | Deer Park Water – 25% |
| Blind taste tests of popular drinks and lower-sugar/fat alternatives | ‘Re-energize!’ | Pepsi Next – 20% | ||||||
| ‘Refuel!’ | Coke Zero – 20% | |||||||
| Rutter’s 1% Milk – 20% | ||||||||
| 2: Healthier Essentials (Staple Foods) | 8 weeks; Apr–Jun 2013 |
Replace white bread with whole-wheat bread Use frozen vegetables to increase vegetable intake Switch to tuna in water for a healthy lunch alternative | Banana/apple/whole-wheat bread pudding samples and recipes | ‘What’s the difference between whole and refined grains?’ | ‘The Value of Frozen Vegetables’ (pick some up at your local corner store!) | ‘Fiber-rich!’ | Reusable cloth grocery bags with BHRR logo | Essential Everyday frozen vegetables (3 types) – 10% |
| ‘Wholey Delicious!’ | Hanover & Bird’s Eye frozen vegetables (3 types) – 20% | |||||||
| No-mayo tuna salad samples and recipes | ‘Protein-Packed!’ | 100% whole-wheat bread – 20% | ||||||
| Starkist & Bumblebee chunk light tuna – 10% | ||||||||
| Starkist & Bumblebee white albacore tuna – 20% | ||||||||
| 3: Healthier Snacks | 8 weeks; Jun–Aug 2013 |
Replace sweets with lower-sugar/calorie alternatives Try baked potato chips instead of fried Have fresh fruit for a healthy snack | ‘What’s in your snack?’ | ‘Easy and Quick Snacks 150 calories or less!’ | ‘Fresh Fruit Sold Here!’ | ‘Low-fat Snack Attack!’ | Produce refrigerator or freezer with BHRR logo (store) | Utz Baked potato chips – 30% |
| Baked chip taste test | ‘Have a Snack Attack without the Fat!’ | Quaker Oats 90 calorie granola bars – 15% | ||||||
| Fruit salad samples | ‘Baked is Better!’ | Baked Chip Clips with BHRR logo (consumer) | Fresh fruit (apples, oranges, bananas) − 20% | |||||
Baseline store and storeowner characteristics per treatment group; B’More Healthy Retail Rewards intervention conducted in twenty-four corner stores and two wholesale stores in Baltimore City, MD, USA, from February to August 2013
| Store(owner) characteristic | Pricing only | Communications | Combined pricing | Control | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
| |||||
| % | % | % | % | |||||
| Storeowner gender | ||||||||
| Male | 6 | 100·0 | 5 | 83·3 | 5 | 83·3 | 6 | 100·0 |
| Storeowner race | ||||||||
| Asian | 5 | 83·3 | 4 | 66·7 | 4 | 66·7 | 4 | 66·7 |
| African American | 1 | 16·7 | 2 | 33·3 | 1 | 16·7 | 1 | 16·7 |
| White | 0 | 0·0 | 0 | 0·0 | 1 | 16·7 | 1 | 16·7 |
| Storeowner ethnicity | ||||||||
| Hispanic/Latino | 0 | 0·0 | 1 | 16·7 | 1 | 16·7 | 1 | 16·7 |
| Storeowner is the primary food shopper for the store | 5 | 83·3 | 5 | 83·3 | 4 | 66·7 | 6 | 100·0 |
| WIC-approved | 3 | 50·0 | 2 | 33·3 | 4 | 66·7 | 2 | 33·3 |
| Accepts SNAP | 6 | 100·0 | 6 | 100·0 | 5 | 83·3 | 5 | 83·3 |
| Sells alcohol | 1 | 16·7 | 2 | 33·3 | 0 | 0·0 | 0 | 0·0 |
| Sells tobacco products | 6 | 100·0 | 6 | 100·0 | 6 | 100·0 | 6 | 100·0 |
| Checkout counter enclosed in Plexiglas | 6 | 100·0 | 6 | 100·0 | 4 | 66·7 | 5 | 83·3 |
| Behind-the-glass | 2 | 33·3 | 2 | 33·3 | 1 | 16·7 | 1 | 16·7 |
| Store(owner) characteristic | Mean | Mean | Mean | Mean | ||||
|
| ||||||||
| Number of times storeowner shopped for his/her store in the past 30 d | 33·6 | 15·5 | 43·9 | 13·2 | 44·0 | 21·8 | 38·7 | 6·6 |
| Number of times storeowner shopped at participating wholesale stores in the past 30 d | 17·8 | 9·4 | 25·0 | 8·4 | 15·8 | 12·8 | 21·0 | 9·1 |
| Number of employees (incl. family members. excluding owner) | 2·5 | 1·8 | 2·2 | 0·8 | 3·8 | 2·3 | 2·3 | 1·9 |
| Number of years in business | 11·1 | 9·9 | 8·1 | 5·1 | 4·2 | 2·9 | 14·5 | 8·4 |
| Average number of unique customers per day | 147·0 | 85·0 | 154·0 | 103·0 | 145·5 | 145·0 | 196·0 | 87·0 |
| Number of beverage refrigerators | 2·8 | 0·8 | 4·3 | 2·9 | 3·3 | 1·4 | 3·7 | 1·4 |
| Number of additional refrigerators (incl. deli cases) | 1·5 | 1·2 | 1·2 | 0·4 | 1·0 | 1·1 | 1·3 | 0·5 |
| Number of freezers | 3·0 | 1·1 | 2·7 | 1·0 | 2·8 | 0·4 | 3·1 | 0·8 |
| Frequency of food/beverage deliveries in the past 30 d | 16·7 | 10·5 | 10·7 | 8·8 | 15·7 | 12·7 | 21·5 | 11·3 |
WIC, Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children; SNAP, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.
No significant differences found between treatment groups (P > 0·05).
Fisher’s exact test (for expected frequencies of <5) for dichotomous outcomes.
‘Behind-the-glass’ stores are characterized by having barriers of Plexiglas walls separating the consumer on one side from the retail items and store employees on the other side.
Means reported using one-way ANOVA for continuous outcomes (for interpretation). Differences between groups determined using Kruskal–Wallis tests.
Treatment effects for intervention groups compared with control; B’More Healthy Retail Rewards intervention conducted in twenty-four corner stores and two wholesale stores in Baltimore City, MD, USA, from February to August 2013
| Pricing only | Communications only | Combined pricing and communications | Control | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
| ||||||||||||
| Measure | Baseline | Change from | Diff. in | Baseline | Change from | Diff. in | Baseline | Change from | Diff. in | Baseline | Change from | ||||
| Stocking score | |||||||||||||||
| Phase 1 beverages | 1·2 | 0·4 | 0·4 | 0·8 | 1·2 | 0·8 | 1·0 | 1·3 | 1·7 | 0·8 | 1·0 | 1·3 | 1·5 | 0·5 | −0·3 |
| Phase 2 staple foods | 1·7 | 1·0 | 0·5 | 0·7 | 1·5 | 1·0 | −0·8 | −0·7 | 1·8 | 1·2 | 1·0 | 0·8 | 1·5 | 0·5 | −0·2 |
| Phase 3 snack foods | 1·3 | 1·5 | 1·7 | 2·2 | 1·0 | 1·1 | 1·3 | 1·8 | 2·2 | 1·5 | 0·8 | 1·3 | 1·2 | 0·8 | −0·5 |
| All foods combined | 4·2 | 2·3 | 2·6 | 3·6 | 3·7 | 1·6 | 1·5 | 2·5 | 5·7 | 2·3 | 2·5 | 3·5 | 4·2 | 1·6 | −1·0 |
| Sales (units) | |||||||||||||||
| Phase 1 beverages | 15·7 | 12·9 | 5·1 | 3·3 | 22·7 | 29·3 | −8·9 | −10·7 | 10·0 | 5·0 | 7·7 | 5·9 | 14·6 | 10·3 | 1·8 |
| Phase 2 staple foods | 8·3 | 12·1 | −6·1 | −5·6 | 1·4 | 2·1 | −0·9 | −0·3 | 4·3 | 4·2 | −1·1 | −0·6 | 2·5 | 2·9 | −0·6 |
| Phase 3 snack foods | 10·6 | 18·8 | −0·9 | 3·6 | 5·7 | 8·0 | −1·5 | 2·9 | 12·9 | 13·9 | 2·0 | 6·4 | 9·6 | 8·7 | −4·4 |
| All foods combined | 34·5 | 31·8 | −2·0 | 1·2 | 29·8 | 29·2 | −11·3 | −8·1 | 27·2 | 18·3 | 8·6 | 11·8 | 26·6 | 13·1 | −3·2 |
| Promoted food prices | |||||||||||||||
| Phase 1 beverages | 7·14 | 2·22 | 0·00 | 0·00 | 7·76 | 5·38 | −0·55 | −0·55 | 8·30 | 5·41 | 0·16 | 0·16 | 4·18 | 3·54 | 0·00 |
| Phase 2 staple foods | 7·64 | 3·33 | 0·16 | 0·09 | 4·27 | 2·53 | 0·02 | −0·04 | 7·77 | 5·48 | −0·40 | −0·47 | 4·56 | 3·06 | 0·07 |
| Phase 3 snack foods | 1·76 | 0·82 | 0·15 | 0·14 | 1·23 | 1·16 | 0·17 | 0·16 | 2·46 | 1·61 | 0·02 | 0·01 | 1·63 | 2·21 | 0·01 |
| All foods combined | 16·55 | 2·12 | 0·31 | 0·24 | 13·26 | 8·57 | −0·35 | −0·43 | 18·52 | 11·72 | −0·22 | −0·30 | 10·38 | 6·50 | 0·08 |
P≤0·05,
P≤0·01,
P≤0·001.
Unless otherwise noted, treatment effect estimates were derived from difference-in-difference analyses using linear generalized estimating equations with independent correlation structure and robust se (change in intervention scores from baseline – change in control scores from baseline).
Exchangeable correlation structure used.
Baseline score indicates the pooled prices of foods per phase of those foods that were stocked. If a food was not stocked at either time point, the price was given a value of 0 for both pre and post measurements, so total change was 0 for these foods.
Unstructured correlation structure used.