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Supermarket nutritionists' perspectives, views and experiences on affordability interventions to support healthier and more environmentally sustainable food purchasing in UK retail settings. [Preprint]

Stone, Rebecca A.; Brown, Adrian; Douglas, Flora; Greatwood, Hannah; Griffiths, Claire; Hunter, Emma; Johnstone, Alexandra M.; Lonnie, Marta; Morris, Michelle A.; Skeggs, Hannah; Hardman, Charlotte A.

Authors

Rebecca A. Stone

Adrian Brown

Hannah Greatwood

Claire Griffiths

Alexandra M. Johnstone

Marta Lonnie

Michelle A. Morris

Hannah Skeggs

Charlotte A. Hardman



Abstract

Food insecurity (lack of reliable access to affordable and nutritious food) is a major concern in high-income countries because it increases the risk of poor nutrition, obesity and associated adverse health outcomes. Healthier diets are often also more environmentally sustainable (hereafter; sustainable), an important factor in reducing climate change. Practice-based interventions are therefore urgently needed to support people living with food insecurity and obesity to access and afford healthier and sustainable foods. Supermarkets are a key area for intervention, as purchasing can be an antecedent to consumption. However, the retailers' perspectives on the feasibility of implementing affordability interventions are often overlooked and under-researched. Therefore, this study explored the perspectives, views and experiences of major UK supermarket senior nutritionists on the acceptability and feasibility of using affordability interventions for healthier and more sustainable food in the supermarket. We recruited seven UK senior supermarket nutritionists who represented 85% of the UK grocery market share. We used semi-structured interviews and analysed the data using a reflective thematic analysis approach. Supermarket nutritionists perceived that their business did prioritise health and environmental sustainability for customers. However, there were several challenges encountered when trying to promote healthier and more sustainable food in the supermarket environment, including profitability concerns, unpredictability of intervention outcomes, control over own-brand products, perceived intention-behaviour gap, and a belief that they are already implementing affordability interventions. Differences in how supermarkets approach the evaluation of interventions also emerged, as well as a willingness to collaborate with academics and other retailers to optimise the evaluation of interventions. Lastly, supermarket nutritionists raised the need for an operationalised definition for sustainable food products. This study therefore found that affordability interventions to support customers to purchase healthier and more sustainable food require supermarkets to consider multiple challenges. Findings highlight the need for upstream intervention that mandates and facilitates multi-lever approaches to health and sustainability without compromising commercial viability, along with practice-based approaches to implementation and evaluation.

Citation

STONE, R.A., BROWN, A., DOUGLAS, F., GREATWOOD, H., GRIFFITHS, C., HUNTER, E., JOHNSTONE, A.M., LONNIE, M., MORRIS, M.A., SKEGGS, H. and HARDMAN, C.A. 2024. Supermarket nutritionists' perspectives, views and experiences on affordability interventions to support healthier and more environmentally sustainable food purchasing in UK retail settings. [Preprint]. Hosted on OSF Preprints [online]. Available from: https://doi.org/10.31219/osf.io/6v4nx

Working Paper Type Preprint
Deposit Date Jan 17, 2025
Publicly Available Date Jan 17, 2025
DOI https://doi.org/10.31219/osf.io/6v4nx
Keywords Healthy eating; Food insecurity; Obesity; Grocery shopping; Supermarkets; Environmentally sustainable foods; Food affordability; Supermarket nutrition
Public URL https://rgu-repository.worktribe.com/output/2519037
Additional Information This file includes supplementary materials that are hosted separately from the main text on OSF Preprints. This study was pre-registered on OSF Registries: https://osf.io/3kw6x

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