Abstract

Increasing rates of childhood obesity worldwide has focused attention on the obesogenic food environment. This paper reports an analysis of children’s interactions with food in convenience stores. Kids’Cam was a cross-sectional study conducted from July 2014 to June 2015 in New Zealand in which 168 randomly selected children aged 11–14 years old wore a wearable camera for a 4–day period. In this ancillary study, images from children who visited a convenience store were manually coded for food and drink availability. Twenty-two percent of children (n = 37) visited convenience stores on 62 occasions during the 4-day data collection period. Noncore items dominated the food and drinks available to children at a rate of 8.3 to 1 (means were 300 noncore and 36 core, respectively). The food and drinks marketed in-store were overwhelmingly noncore and promoted using accessible placement, price offers, product packaging, and signage. Most of the 70 items purchased by children were noncore foods or drinks (94.6%), and all of the purchased food or drink subsequently consumed was noncore. This research highlights convenience stores as a key source of unhealthy food and drink for children, and policies are needed to reduce the role of convenience stores in the obesogenic food environment.

Highlights

  • Increasing rates of childhood obesity worldwide are a major public health concern [1]

  • Using the FoodSee methodology with the Kids’Cam data, this study aimed to examine children’s interactions with convenience stores

  • The sampling strategy resulted in representation from children with a range of ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds from schools that were widely distributed throughout the three main areas of the Wellington area—Wellington City, Porirua and the Hutt Valley

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Summary

Introduction

Increasing rates of childhood obesity worldwide are a major public health concern [1]. In 2016, it was estimated that 50 million girls and 74 million boys were obese and that a further 213 million children were overweight, increasing their risk of noncommunicable disease over the life course, especially type 2 diabetes [2]. Research attention has focused on the obesogenic food environment and how it influences dietary behaviour and bodyweight in children [3,4,5,6,7]. New Zealand children have the second highest rates of obesity in countries affiliated with the Organisation of Economic. New Zealand children grow up in obesogenic environments, of which convenience stores. Food retailers, including convenience stores, feature prominently in New Zealand (NZ) children’s lives [11]

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