| Literature DB >> 30754690 |
María Sandín Vázquez1,2, Jesús Rivera3,4, Paloma Conde5, Marta Gutiérrez6, Julia Díez7, Joel Gittelsohn8, Manuel Franco9,10,11.
Abstract
Exploring subjective elements of the food environment remains key to understand why and how residents purchase food. Our aim was to explore and describe the social norms relating to the local food environment and food purchasing behaviors, as perceived by residents and food traders in Madrid, Spain. This qualitative study took place in a middle socioeconomic status neighborhood of Madrid between January 2015 and May 2016. We conducted 35 semi-structured interviews. We used stratified purposive sampling to recruit residents, neighborhood workers (N = 20) and food traders (N = 15) representing different levels of involvement with food purchasing behaviors. We analyzed these data using an interpretative phenomenological analysis approach. Participants highlighted social aspects of the food environment in relation to food purchasing behaviors. First, interpersonal and relational food environment elements were emphasized, including trust and tradition. Participants also identified generational demographic trends in relation to changes in the way residents purchased food: the new pace of life and the lack of time to buy fresh food and to cook at home. All these elements were influenced by the economic crisis. Food environment interventions aiming to improve food purchasing behaviors and residents' diets should consider intermediate social aspects of the food environment like trust and tradition and the fast pace of life of younger generations.Entities:
Keywords: food choice; food environment; neighborhoods; qualitative methodology
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30754690 PMCID: PMC6388162 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16030502
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Profile of neighborhood residents (N = 20) and food traders (N = 15) interviewed.
| Neighborhood Residents ( | Food Traders ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | Age | Key Variable for Selection/Inclusion | Food Store Type and Description |
| M | 48 | Active worker resident | Type 1: Butchery |
| M | 85 | Retired resident | Type 1: Fishmonger |
| M | 63 | Active worker resident | Type 1: Fruit and vegetable store |
| M | 62 | Neighborhood association activist | Type 1: Poultry |
| M | 42 | Immigrant resident | Type 2: Latin American fruit and vegetable store |
| M | 65 | Retired resident | Type 2: Arab fruit and vegetable store |
| M | 63 | Local politician | Type 2: Latin American convenience store |
| M | 36 | Active worker resident | Type 2: Chinese-run convenience store |
| M | 48 | Active worker resident | Type 2: Chinese convenience store |
| F | 45 | Immigrant resident | Type 2: Chinese convenience store |
| F | 69 | Retired resident | Type 2: Chinese convenience store |
| F | 83 | Retired resident | Type 2: Chinese convenience store |
| F | 58 | Unemployed resident | Type 3: Small supermarket |
| F | 54 | Active worker resident | Type 3: Small supermarket |
| F | 61 | Active worker resident | Type 3: Small supermarket |
| F | 41 | Primary school teacher | |
| F | 53 | Primary health care doctor | |
| F | 51 | Head of Health Promotion Department | |
| F | 57 | Head manager of senior care centers | |
| F | 38 | Recreational and cultural activities technician | |
Neighborhood participants’ and food traders’ interview topic guide.
| Neighborhood Participants | Food Traders |
|---|---|
|
In your family, who is the person in charge of buying food? Where is the family food purchased? What elements of the neighborhood do you think influence purchase? Factors that influence the purchase (offers, types of food, variety, schedules, the location of the store, trust with the shopkeeper, quality, etc.). What is your perception about the food that you/your family eat at home? Do you believe that it is influenced by the neighborhood where you live? Do you think that the food environment changes that have taken place in the neighborhood have influenced your use of such stores? How? Why? Is it easy to eat healthily in your neighborhood? In that sense, have you seen any kind of change/evolution in the feeding practices of the people around you? Do you go out to eat/drink in your neighborhood? | Description of the business and its customers The time that the store has been present in the neighborhood. Best-selling products in the store. Types of customers in your store. The relationship between types of customers with product types. |
| Changes in the supply and demand for food Food store changes over time (types of customers, ways to buy (weekly vs. daily)). Major food store changes that have occurred in the neighborhood. | |
| Factors influencing food supply and demand Factors that influence the purchase (offers, types of food, variety, schedules, place of the store, trust in the shopkeeper, quality, etc.). Influence on neighborhood residents’ patterns due to changes in food stores. |
Main results of residents’ perceptions.
| Theme | Quote |
|---|---|
| Interpersonal relationships: affective factors, trust, and tradition. | “The small store also survives because customers like going and they know your name… I’ve got my customers. I know what her husband likes, what she likes, what her daughter likes, and so that trust is what we don’t get from the big supermarkets, and it’s what people are looking for in small shops.” (Food trader, store type 1). |
| New pace of life, lack of time (look for variety, prices, and opening hours). | “…young people don’t care about trust, but want speed, velocity, without thinking about whether you treat them well, but I think they buy worse quality…” (Food trader, store type 1). |
| Reduced purchasing power relates to people purchasing a lesser variety of healthy foods and smaller quantities. | “Before, people bought much more in kilos, and now, they buy item by item. We don’t like leaving things in the freezer… So that’s how it goes, they buy a lot more by the piece, just enough so there’s no leftovers”. (Food trader, store type 1). |