Abstract

The mitigation measures (e.g., lockdown policies) in response to the COVID-19 pandemic impacted food systems in unprecedented ways, in both scope and immediacy. Food retail, for example, changed fundamentally in the United States, as access to nutritious food became limited, supply chain shortages were common, and mandatory public health measures led to behavior changes among customers and employees. In the present case study, we hypothesized that these changes led to food purchasing shifts of grocery store consumers. Such shifts are seen as an outcome of both endogenous factors at the individual level and exogenous factors at the government/policy level. Our case study sought to better understand how the pandemic and associated regulations shaped consumer food choices during the “hard” lockdown period in Montana during 2020. We selected 112 food products based on the highest sales in a Gallatin County, Montana, grocery store. They were analyzed by predefined food groups aligned to the Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2020. All purchases were processed for each selected food item during March and April 2019 (before the pandemic) and March and April 2020 (during the lockdown in Montana). To further describe the pandemic experiences qualitatively, we conducted semi-structured interviews with managers and employees from two stores in Gallatin County. Overall, we found that consumers increased purchases in most food groups during the pandemic, including nutrient-dense and energy-dense products, most outstandingly for starchy vegetables, legumes, and convenience food. Products with long shelf-life and that required preparation at home were preferred. Endogenous causes, specifically panic and rushing, were likely stronger drivers of consumer behavior and food choices than regulations. Nonetheless, lockdown policies impacted consumer food purchases. We present a series of policy and practice recommendations based on our findings and the emerging literature on this topic.

Highlights

  • The COVID-19 pandemic, especially in the early months of 2020, changed the way food was obtained and consumed worldwide (Boyacι-Gündüz et al, 2021)

  • In terms of caloric value per food category, the strongest relative increases by trend occurred for starchy, followed by “other,” red and orange vegetables, and legumes, with increases beyond 60%

  • Our case study focused on the impact of COVID-19 legislation and individual customer perceptions on grocery store food purchases in Gallatin County, MT, during the initial months of the pandemic

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Summary

Introduction

The COVID-19 pandemic, especially in the early months of 2020, changed the way food was obtained and consumed worldwide (Boyacι-Gündüz et al, 2021). Despite being the wealthiest nation in the world, in 2020, the US had the highest number of COVID-19 cases and deaths in the world (Blum, 2020), which made COVID-19 the third-leading cause of death in 2020, only behind heart disease and cancer (Huizar et al, 2020; Ahmad and Anderson, 2021) Pandemics of this magnitude, from the Black Plague in the Middle Ages to the Spanish Flu in the early twentieth century, have always caused enormous societal change (Reeves et al, 2020), including altered access to food (Wen et al, 2005). The swine flu pandemic in 2009 increased food safety concerns related to airborne viruses, causing US customers to wear face masks in grocery stores (Goodwin et al, 2009)

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