3.9 Article

Food and Beverage Environments at Store Checkouts in California: Mostly Unhealthy Products

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ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.cdnut.2023.100075

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added sugars; checkout; food environment; food industry; grocery; healthy retail; nutrition policy; sugars; sodium; supermarkets

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The study aimed to classify checkout product facings in California food stores. The results showed that the most common food and beverage items at checkouts were candy, sugar-sweetened beverages, salty snacks, and sweets, which failed to meet the healthy checkout standards. Compared to chain supermarkets, dollar and independent grocery stores had a lower percentage of food and beverage facings that met the standards. Within the checkout area, endcaps and snaking sections had fewer products meeting the standards compared to lane and register areas.
Background: As the only place in a store where customers must pass through, checkouts may be especially influential over purchases. Research is needed to understand the healthfulness of checkout environments.Objectives: The objective of this study was to classify checkout product facings in California food stores.Methods: In a cross-sectional study, 102 stores, including chains (dollar stores, drugstores, specialty food stores, supermarkets, and mass merchandisers) and independent supermarkets and grocery stores were sampled from 4 northern California cities. Observational assess-ments of each checkout product facing were conducted in February 2021 using the Store CheckOUt Tool. Facings were classified by category and healthfulness, defined by meeting Berkeley's Healthy Checkout Ordinance's healthy checkout standards: unsweetened beverages and specific foods containing =5 g added sugar and =200 mg sodium per serving. Log binomial regressions compared healthfulness by store and checkout characteristics.Results: Of 26,758 food and beverage checkout facings, the most common categories were candy (31%), gum (18%), sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs; 11%), salty snacks (9%), mints (7%), and sweets (6%). Water represented only 3% and fruits and vegetables 1% of these facings. Only 30% of food and beverage facings met Berkeley's healthy checkout standards, with 70% not meeting the standards. The percentage of food and beverage facings not meeting the standards was even higher (89%) among snack-sized packages (=2 servings/ package). Compared with chain supermarkets, mass merchandisers, and specialty food stores (34%-36%), dollar and independent grocery stores had a lower percentage of food and beverage facings that met the healthy checkout standards (18%-20%; P < 0.05). Compared with lane and register areas (35%), endcaps and snaking sections within checkouts had fewer food and beverage facings that met the standards (21%-23%; P < 0.001).Conclusions: Most foods and beverages at checkout consisted of candy, SSBs, salty snacks, and sweets and failed to meet the healthy checkout standards.

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