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Implementation of a UK supermarket intervention to increase purchasing of fresh fruit and vegetables: process evaluation of the WRAPPED natural experiment

Implementation of a UK supermarket intervention to increase purchasing of fresh fruit and vegetables: process evaluation of the WRAPPED natural experiment
Implementation of a UK supermarket intervention to increase purchasing of fresh fruit and vegetables: process evaluation of the WRAPPED natural experiment

Background: placement interventions, characterised by greater availability and more prominent positioning of healthy food products in supermarkets and other food stores, are associated with healthier patterns of purchasing and diet. The WRAPPED intervention study is a natural experiment that aims to evaluate a supermarket placement intervention to improve fruit and vegetable sales, household purchasing and the dietary quality of women and their children. Process evaluation, alongside the evaluation of outcomes, is essential to understand how interventions are implemented, under what circumstances they are effective, and their mechanisms of impact. This study aimed to assess the implementation of the WRAPPED placement intervention. 

Methods: the study adopted a convergent mixed-methods design. Quantitative data extracted from study store planograms (visual representation of stores and product placement) before and after intervention implementation were used to assess the positioning of fresh fruit and vegetables in the first aisle from the front entrance (intervention dose). The availability of fresh fruit and vegetables in each study store was examined from stock-keeping unit (SKU) figures before and after intervention implementation. An intervention implementation survey (IIS) completed with store managers and senior supervisors before and 1- and 6-months post-intervention implementation enabled examination of the context across study stores. Semi-structured interviews with store managers and senior supervisors provided qualitative data about store staff experiences and perceptions of the intervention between 6-months post-intervention implementation. 

Results: the placement intervention was implemented with close adherence to the study protocol. There were marked differences, post-intervention implementation, in the positioning of fresh fruit and vegetables in intervention stores compared with control stores: median distance in intervention stores was 8.0 m (IQR 5.0 to 10.0) compared with 23.8 m (IQR 21.0 to 30.0) in control stores (P < 0.0001). The availability of varieties of fresh fruit and vegetables increased in intervention stores post-intervention compared with control stores: median (IQR) among intervention stores was 72 (51, 84) compared with 56.5 (50, 62) in control stores (P = 0.03). The mean change from baseline to post-implementation in number of different fruit and vegetables available in intervention stores was 15.3 (SD 16.7) (P = 0.01). IIS and interview data demonstrated little difference between intervention and store contexts over time. Reinforcing factors for intervention implementation included: head-office leadership, store staff views and attitudes and increased awareness of the importance of offering healthy food in prominent locations within stores. 

Conclusion: this study demonstrated that placement interventions which promote fresh fruit and vegetables to customers in discount supermarkets can be implemented effectively. These findings are encouraging for the implementation of national food policies which modify retail environments to improve population purchasing and dietary patterns. Trial registration: NCT03573973; Pre-results.

Commerce, Consumer Behavior, Diet, Diet, Healthy, Food Supply/methods, Fruit, Health Promotion/methods, Humans, Supermarkets, United Kingdom, Vegetables, Healthy eating, Intervention implementation, Process evaluation
1479-5868
Baird, Janis
f4bf2039-6118-436f-ab69-df8b4d17f824
Dhuria, Preeti
470c09bf-2b4d-4db6-9100-a6878b4d4d32
Payne, Hannah
682f0d8b-a0cc-4557-b7b4-d64314aab36d
Crozier, Sarah
9c3595ce-45b0-44fa-8c4c-4c555e628a03
Lawrence, Wendy
e9babc0a-02c9-41df-a289-7b18f17bf7d8
Vogel, Christina
708e7fda-a6d3-4362-b5f8-69fe2b3e9d7b
Baird, Janis
f4bf2039-6118-436f-ab69-df8b4d17f824
Dhuria, Preeti
470c09bf-2b4d-4db6-9100-a6878b4d4d32
Payne, Hannah
682f0d8b-a0cc-4557-b7b4-d64314aab36d
Crozier, Sarah
9c3595ce-45b0-44fa-8c4c-4c555e628a03
Lawrence, Wendy
e9babc0a-02c9-41df-a289-7b18f17bf7d8
Vogel, Christina
708e7fda-a6d3-4362-b5f8-69fe2b3e9d7b

Baird, Janis, Dhuria, Preeti, Payne, Hannah, Crozier, Sarah, Lawrence, Wendy and Vogel, Christina (2024) Implementation of a UK supermarket intervention to increase purchasing of fresh fruit and vegetables: process evaluation of the WRAPPED natural experiment. International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity, 21 (1), [128]. (doi:10.1186/s12966-024-01679-3).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: placement interventions, characterised by greater availability and more prominent positioning of healthy food products in supermarkets and other food stores, are associated with healthier patterns of purchasing and diet. The WRAPPED intervention study is a natural experiment that aims to evaluate a supermarket placement intervention to improve fruit and vegetable sales, household purchasing and the dietary quality of women and their children. Process evaluation, alongside the evaluation of outcomes, is essential to understand how interventions are implemented, under what circumstances they are effective, and their mechanisms of impact. This study aimed to assess the implementation of the WRAPPED placement intervention. 

Methods: the study adopted a convergent mixed-methods design. Quantitative data extracted from study store planograms (visual representation of stores and product placement) before and after intervention implementation were used to assess the positioning of fresh fruit and vegetables in the first aisle from the front entrance (intervention dose). The availability of fresh fruit and vegetables in each study store was examined from stock-keeping unit (SKU) figures before and after intervention implementation. An intervention implementation survey (IIS) completed with store managers and senior supervisors before and 1- and 6-months post-intervention implementation enabled examination of the context across study stores. Semi-structured interviews with store managers and senior supervisors provided qualitative data about store staff experiences and perceptions of the intervention between 6-months post-intervention implementation. 

Results: the placement intervention was implemented with close adherence to the study protocol. There were marked differences, post-intervention implementation, in the positioning of fresh fruit and vegetables in intervention stores compared with control stores: median distance in intervention stores was 8.0 m (IQR 5.0 to 10.0) compared with 23.8 m (IQR 21.0 to 30.0) in control stores (P < 0.0001). The availability of varieties of fresh fruit and vegetables increased in intervention stores post-intervention compared with control stores: median (IQR) among intervention stores was 72 (51, 84) compared with 56.5 (50, 62) in control stores (P = 0.03). The mean change from baseline to post-implementation in number of different fruit and vegetables available in intervention stores was 15.3 (SD 16.7) (P = 0.01). IIS and interview data demonstrated little difference between intervention and store contexts over time. Reinforcing factors for intervention implementation included: head-office leadership, store staff views and attitudes and increased awareness of the importance of offering healthy food in prominent locations within stores. 

Conclusion: this study demonstrated that placement interventions which promote fresh fruit and vegetables to customers in discount supermarkets can be implemented effectively. These findings are encouraging for the implementation of national food policies which modify retail environments to improve population purchasing and dietary patterns. Trial registration: NCT03573973; Pre-results.

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Accepted/In Press date: 29 October 2024
Published date: 11 November 2024
Keywords: Commerce, Consumer Behavior, Diet, Diet, Healthy, Food Supply/methods, Fruit, Health Promotion/methods, Humans, Supermarkets, United Kingdom, Vegetables, Healthy eating, Intervention implementation, Process evaluation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496928
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496928
ISSN: 1479-5868
PURE UUID: 4f51158b-89ab-4c96-9b0d-bf53bd2706f8
ORCID for Janis Baird: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4039-4361
ORCID for Preeti Dhuria: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2803-4424
ORCID for Sarah Crozier: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9524-1127
ORCID for Wendy Lawrence: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1264-0438

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Date deposited: 08 Jan 2025 13:03
Last modified: 10 Jan 2025 03:05

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Contributors

Author: Janis Baird ORCID iD
Author: Preeti Dhuria ORCID iD
Author: Hannah Payne
Author: Sarah Crozier ORCID iD
Author: Wendy Lawrence ORCID iD
Author: Christina Vogel

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