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Women's Responses to Adjusted Product Placement and Its Effects on Diet - 2

Not Applicable
Conditions
Diet Modification
Interventions
Other: Improved product placement of fresh fruit and vegetables
Other: Sham comparator
Registration Number
NCT03573973
Lead Sponsor
University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust
Brief Summary

This study is the largest supermarket trial internationally and will assess the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of improving the placement of fresh fruit and vegetables in discount supermarkets in improving the fresh fruit and vegetable purchasing of women aged 18-45 years.

Detailed Description

WRAPPED2 (Women's Responses to Adjusted Product Placement and its Effects on Diet - 2) is a natural experiment with a prospective matched controlled cluster design. The setting is a discount supermarket chain in the United Kingdom regularly used by disadvantaged families for their main shop. The intervention is a store refurbishment programme that involves creation of a new fresh fruit and vegetable section in the store entrance. Control stores keep the existing layout with a limited range of fresh fruit and vegetables and placement of fresh fruit and vegetables at the back of the store.

A total of 45 participants will be recruited from each of 18 intervention and 18 matched control stores through the retailer's loyalty card scheme (postal letter) and shop floor recruitment; these methods proved effective during the pilot. Participants will be women aged 18-45 years who shopped at a study store in the 12 weeks before recruitment. This study is unique in its collection of individual level sales data, as well as demographic and dietary information, and is the first to collect outcome data for more than one family member. Participant's weekly sales data will be obtained through the retailer's loyalty card scheme and will cover 3 months before refurbishment, plus 0-3 months and 3-6 months after. Change in women's fresh fruit and vegetable purchasing from baseline to 3 months is the primary outcome. Secondary outcome data about women's diets, their young child's diet (2-6 years), food shopping habits, perceptions of supermarket environment, and psychosocial and demographic characteristics will be collected by telephone survey before refurbishment, and 1, 3 and 6 months after. Weekly sales data for study stores will be provided by the retailer.

Cost-effectiveness will be assessed from individual, retailer and societal perspectives. Process evaluation will assess implementation, mechanisms of impact and context.

This study is politically and scientifically important being one of the first field studies of this kind. The findings could provide strong evidence for future public health policy interventions to help address inequalities in diet and non-communicable disease risk by supporting development of a healthy store layout that could be adopted more widely in food retail outlets.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
667
Inclusion Criteria
  • Women aged 18-60 years
  • Hold a store loyalty card
  • Shop regularly in a study store
  • Shoppers who choose items in-store but opt for home delivery
Exclusion Criteria
  • Women under the age of 18 or over 60 years
  • Males or children
  • Irregular shopper or online-only shopper
  • Do not hold store loyalty card

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Fresh fruit and vegetable placement interventionImproved product placement of fresh fruit and vegetablesThe intervention is a store refurbishment programme that includes the creation of a new fresh fruit and vegetable section at the store entrance with expanded range thus improving the availability and position of fresh fruit and vegetables.
ControlSham comparatorThe control condition is the existing store layout with a limited range of fresh fruit and vegetables that are placed at the back of the store.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Participant's weekly fruit and vegetable purchasing patterns0-6 month period post-refurbishment

These data will be obtained through the retailer's loyalty card scheme and provide information about the number of items of each product purchased at each store visit.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Children's dietary quality3 and 6 month follow-up post intervention commencement

20-item food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) will be used to create standardised diet quality scores for each child. Dietary quality scores will be calculated by multiplying the reported frequency of consumption of each of the 20 items from their FFQ by corresponding weightings derived from the appropriate principal components analysis and then summing the results.

Women's daily fruit and vegetable intake3 and 6 months follow-up post intervention commencement

2-item tool has been validated against urinary potassium and plasma ascorbic acid to describe high (≥5 portions/day) and low (≤2.5 portions/day) intake.

Weekly store sales of fresh fruit and vegetables0-3 and 0-6 month periods post-refurbishment

Store sales data will be provided from electronic transaction records aggregated to the weekly level

To determine whether change in participants' in fruit and vegetable purchasing patterns (intervention effects) differ according to their level of educational attainment0-6 month period post-refurbishment

To assess interaction on intervention effects according to participants' highest educational qualification attained in 3 groups (low=GCSE/school departure before 16 years of age, medium=A-levels/HND/diploma, high=degree)

Women's dietary quality3 and 6 month follow-up post intervention commencement

20-item food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) will be used to create standardised diet quality scores for each woman. A dietary quality score for each woman will be calculated by multiplying their reported frequency of consumption of each of the 20 items from their FFQ by corresponding weightings derived from the appropriate principal components analysis and then summing the results.

Economic evaluation to assess the costs and benefits of the intervention from individual, retailer and societal perspectives6 month period post-refurbishment

Use participant survey and purchasing data for food expenditure, time spent food shopping, as well as travel costs to and from supermarkets; retailer costs will be estimates generated through discussion with supermarket staff; societal costs will be estimated for resources associated with the capital investment, changes in food expenditure, time and travel costs for individuals and health and social care costs for diet-related health conditions.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Univeristy of Southampton

🇬🇧

Southampton, Hampshire, United Kingdom

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