4.7 Article

Kids in a Candy Store: An Objective Analysis of Children's Interactions with Food in Convenience Stores

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 12, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu12072143

Keywords

food availability; food marketing; childhood obesity; convenience stores; wearable cameras

Funding

  1. Health Research Council of New Zealand [13/724]
  2. Science Foundation Ireland [12/RC/2289]
  3. European Commission [2011-IRSES-295157-PANAMA]
  4. University of Otago, Wellington
  5. HRC M aori PhD scholarship [15/403]

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Increasing rates of childhood obesity worldwide has focused attention on the obesogenic food environment. This paper reports an analysis of children's interactions with food in convenience stores. Kids'Cam was a cross-sectional study conducted from July 2014 to June 2015 in New Zealand in which 168 randomly selected children aged 11-14 years old wore a wearable camera for a 4-day period. In this ancillary study, images from children who visited a convenience store were manually coded for food and drink availability. Twenty-two percent of children (n= 37) visited convenience stores on 62 occasions during the 4-day data collection period. Noncore items dominated the food and drinks available to children at a rate of 8.3 to 1 (means were 300 noncore and 36 core, respectively). The food and drinks marketed in-store were overwhelmingly noncore and promoted using accessible placement, price offers, product packaging, and signage. Most of the 70 items purchased by children were noncore foods or drinks (94.6%), and all of the purchased food or drink subsequently consumed was noncore. This research highlights convenience stores as a key source of unhealthy food and drink for children, and policies are needed to reduce the role of convenience stores in the obesogenic food environment.

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