Perceived and actual cost of healthier foods versus their less healthy alternatives: a case study in a predominantly black urban township in South Africa.

M Muzigaba, T Puoane
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Abstract

Objectives: There is an increasing awareness of the role played by the food retail characteristics in determining individuals' healthy food purchasing and consumption behaviors. The perceived costs of healthier food alternatives have been shown to contribute negatively to individual's food choices in developed societies. However, there is still a dearth of knowledge regarding this phenomenon in low to middle income countries particularly in Africa. This study explored health club member's experiences in buying healthier food options and compared their perceived cost of selected healthier and less healthy foods with actual market costs in a South African township.

Method: A cross-sectional study design using quantitative and qualitative research methods. The study was conducted in Khayelitsha, a township in the Western Cape Province in South Africa. Participants were 50 members of a health club, mostly female and above 50 years of age. The study was conducted in three phases. The first phase involved interviews with all 50 health club members. During the second phase ten purposively selected members participated in in-depth interviews based on their unhealthy food-purchasing and consumption patterns identified in the first phase. The third phase involved food price audits from supermarkets as well as convenient stores located in the study setting. Quantitative data were subjected to descriptive statistical analysis, while content analysis was used to analyze qualitative data.

Results: Most of the members were illiterate and unemployed, largely dependent on government grants. Qualitative findings showed that low household incomes, their inability to read and interpret nutritional information and personal food preferences contributed to Health club members' unhealthy food-purchasing behaviour. When objectively measured in local stores, the healthier food options proved to be more expensive than their less healthy equivalents. This was consistent with subjects' perceptions about the relative cost of the same foods in their local stores.

Conclusion: Healthier foods tended to be more expensive than their less healthy options in local shops audited - both in reality and in the perceptions of health club members. Low income was reported to militate against health club members' healthy food-purchasing behaviour.

健康食品与不健康食品的感知和实际成本:南非一个以黑人为主的城镇的案例研究。
目的:人们越来越意识到食品零售特征在决定个人健康食品购买和消费行为中的作用。在发达社会,健康食品替代品的感知成本已被证明对个人的食品选择产生负面影响。然而,在低收入和中等收入国家,特别是在非洲,关于这一现象的知识仍然缺乏。本研究探讨了南非一个乡镇的健康俱乐部成员购买健康食品的经验,并比较了他们所选择的健康食品和不健康食品的感知成本与实际市场成本。方法:采用定量和定性研究方法的横断面研究设计。这项研究是在南非西开普省的卡耶利沙镇进行的。参与者是一家健身俱乐部的50名会员,大多数是50岁以上的女性。这项研究分三个阶段进行。第一阶段包括对所有50名健身俱乐部成员的采访。在第二阶段,根据第一阶段确定的不健康食品购买和消费模式,有意挑选的10名成员参加了深度访谈。第三阶段是对研究区域内超市和便利店的食品价格进行审计。定量资料采用描述性统计分析,定性资料采用内容分析。结果:大多数成员是文盲和失业,主要依靠政府补助。定性调查结果显示,家庭收入低、无法阅读和解释营养信息以及个人食物偏好是造成健康俱乐部成员不健康食品购买行为的原因。当在当地商店客观地衡量时,健康食品的选择被证明比不健康的同类食品更昂贵。这与受试者对当地商店中相同食物的相对价格的看法是一致的。结论:在接受调查的当地商店中,健康食品往往比不健康食品更贵——无论是在现实中还是在健康俱乐部成员的观念中。据报告,低收入阻碍了健康俱乐部成员购买健康食品的行为。
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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