4.6 Article

Does Retail Food Diversity in Urban Food Environments Influence Consumer Diets?

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 13, Issue 14, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su13147666

Keywords

food environment; market-level dietary diversity (MLDS); individual dietary diversity; household dietary diversity; urban-poor consumers; Kenya

Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), Germany [15.7860.8-001.00]
  2. CGIAR flagship program Food Systems for Healthier Diets under the CGIAR Research Program on Agriculture for Nutrition and Health (A4NH)

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The food environment significantly influences consumer diets, particularly in poor urban settings where unhealthy, highly-processed foods are predominant. Supermarkets have the highest market-level diversity scores (MLDS), yet do not significantly impact the diets of resource-poor households. On the other hand, high MLDS among informal retail outlets is positively associated with diet quality, while open-air markets show a negative association. Promoting diversification of nutritious foods in traditional retail outlets and improving accessibility can enhance the nutritional status of urban-poor consumers.
The food environment influences consumer diets in significant yet underexplored ways. In this study, we assess the way in which the Nairobi urban food environment-availability, accessibility, affordability, desirability, convenience and marketing-influences the dietary choices and quality of poor urban consumers, by combining market-level diversity scores (MLDS) with household and individual data collected from resource-poor (slum) neighbourhoods in Nairobi, Kenya. We find that urban-poor settings are characterized by a variety of food retail venues, including informal markets such as kiosks, mom-and-pop shops and tabletop vendors, as well as modern retail outlets such as supermarkets. Most of these food outlets predominantly sell unhealthy, highly-processed and energy-dense foods rather than nutritious foods such as vegetables, fruits and animal products. Our analyses show that supermarkets have the highest MLDS, yet they do not significantly influence the diets of resource-poor households. However, a high MLDS among informal retail outlets has a positive association with diet quality; conversely, open-air markets have a negative association. The nutritional status of urban-poor consumers can be improved by promoting the diversification of healthy, nutritious foods across traditional retail outlets and improving accessibility of the outlets to consumers.

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