Depression and Shopping Behavior

Katherine Meckel, Bradley T. Shapiro
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Using a large survey panel that connects household shopping behavior with individual health information, this paper documents correlations between self reported depression and the size and composition of shopping baskets. First, we find that roughly 16% of individuals report suffering from depression and over 30% of households have at least one member who reports suffering from depression. Households with a member suffering from depression exhibit striking differences in shopping behavior: they spend less overall, visit grocery stores less and convenience stores more frequently and spend a smaller share of their baskets on fresh produce and alcohol but a larger share on tobacco. They spend similar shares on unhealthy foods like cakes, candy, and salty snacks. These cross-sectional correlations hold within counties, suggesting that they are not driven by region specific demographics or preferences that are incidentally correlated with depression status. They also hold when considering only single-member households. However, we rule out large differences in shopping behavior within households as they change depression status throughout the sample. Further, using the take-up of antidepressant drugs as an event, we document little change in shopping in response to treatment. With our results, we discuss the takeaways for health policy, decision modeling and targeted marketing.
抑郁与购物行为
通过将家庭购物行为与个人健康信息联系起来的大型调查面板,本文记录了自我报告的抑郁与购物篮的大小和组成之间的相关性。首先,我们发现大约16%的个人报告患有抑郁症,超过30%的家庭至少有一个成员报告患有抑郁症。有成员患有抑郁症的家庭在购物行为上表现出显著的差异:他们的总体支出更少,去杂货店的次数更少,去便利店的次数更多,购买新鲜农产品和酒类的比例更小,但购买烟草的比例更高。他们在蛋糕、糖果和咸零食等不健康食品上的花费也差不多。这些横截面相关性在县内成立,表明它们不是由地区特定的人口统计数据或偶然与抑郁状态相关的偏好驱动的。当只考虑单身家庭时,它们也成立。然而,我们排除了家庭内部购物行为的巨大差异,因为他们在整个样本中改变了抑郁状态。此外,将服用抗抑郁药物作为一个事件,我们记录了治疗对购物的影响很小。根据我们的研究结果,我们讨论了卫生政策、决策建模和目标营销的启示。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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