Abstract

To investigate the feasibility and acceptability of using wearable cameras as a method to capture the opportunities for food and drink purchasing/consumption that young people encounter on their regular journeys to and from school. A qualitative study using multiple data-collection methods including wearable cameras, global positioning system units, individual interviews, food and drink purchase and consumption diaries completed by participants over four days, and an audit of food outlets located within an 800 m Euclidean buffer zone around each school. A community setting. Twenty-two students (fourteen girls and eight boys) aged 13-15 years recruited from four secondary schools in two counties of England. Wearable cameras offered a feasible and acceptable method for collecting food purchase and consumption data when used alongside traditional methods of data collection in a small number of teenagers. We found evidence of participants making deliberate choices about whether or not to purchase/consume food and drink on their journeys. These choices were influenced by priorities over money, friends, journey length, travel mode and ease of access to opportunities for purchase/consumption. Most food and drink items were purchased/consumed within an 800 m Euclidean buffer around school, with items commonly selected being high in energy, fat and sugar. Wearable camera images combined with interviews helped identify unreported items and misreporting errors. Wearable camera images prompt detailed discussion and generate contextually specific information which could offer new insights and understanding around eating behaviour patterns. The feasibility of scaling up the use of these methods requires further empirical work.

Highlights

  • Our main aim was to investigate the use of a novel method to assess its feasibility and acceptability as a research tool to capture and explore the opportunities for food and drink* purchasing and consumption that young people encounter on their regular journeys to and from school

  • Using the time that food was purchased or consumed according to corresponding Vicon Revue data, we identified the participants’ Global Positioning System (GPS) coordinates at the time of the event and calculated if it fell within an 800 m Euclidean buffer from the front entrance of the school

  • A total of 125 young people were invited to participate in the study and thirty-three volunteered to take part (26 %), having gained parental consent

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Summary

Introduction

Our main aim was to investigate the use of a novel method (a wearable camera, Vicon Revue) to assess its feasibility and acceptability as a research tool to capture and explore the opportunities for food and drink* purchasing and consumption that young people encounter on their regular journeys to and from school. The interviews used each set of camera images and questionnaire data as a starting point to explore, clarify and reflect on food purchasing and consumption behaviour of the participant during his/her journeys to and from school.

Results
Conclusion
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