Abstract

BackgroundSuccessful implementation and long-term maintenance of healthy supermarkets initiatives are crucial to achieving potential population health benefits. Understanding barriers and enablers of implementation of real-world trials will enhance wide-scale implementation. This process evaluation of a healthy supermarket intervention sought to describe (i) customer, retailer and stakeholder perspectives on the intervention; (ii) intervention implementation; and (iii) implementation barriers and enablers.MethodsEat Well @ IGA was a 12-month randomised controlled trial conducted in 11 Independent Grocers of Australia (IGA) chain supermarkets in regional Victoria, Australia (5 intervention and 6 wait-listed control stores). Intervention components included trolley and basket signage, local area and in-store promotion, and shelf tags highlighting the healthiest packaged foods. A sequential mixed-methods process evaluation was undertaken. Customer exit surveys investigated demographics, and intervention recall and perceptions. Logistic mixed-models estimated associations between customer responses and demographics, with store as random effect. Supermarket staff surveys investigated staff demographics, interactions with customers, and intervention component feedback. Semi-structured stakeholder interviews with local government, retail and academic partners explored intervention perceptions, and factors which enabled or inhibited implementation, maintenance and scalability. Interviews were inductively coded to identify key themes.ResultsOf 500 customers surveyed, 33%[95%CI:23,44] recalled the Eat Well @ IGA brand and 97%[95%CI:93,99] agreed that IGA should continue its efforts to encourage healthy eating. The 82 staff surveyed demonstrated very favourable intervention perceptions. Themes from 19 interviews included that business models favour sales of unhealthy foods, and that stakeholder collaboration was crucial to intervention design and implementation. Staff surveys and interviews highlighted the need to minimise staff time for project maintenance and to regularly refresh intervention materials to increase and maintain salience among customers.ConclusionsThis process evaluation found that interventions to promote healthy diets in supermarkets can be perceived as beneficial by retailers, customers, and government partners provided that barriers including staff time and intervention salience are addressed. Collaborative partnerships in intervention design and implementation, including retailers, governments, and academics, show potential for encouraging long-term sustainability of interventions.Trial registrationISRCTN, ISRCTN37395231 Registered 4 May 2017.

Highlights

  • Successful implementation and long-term maintenance of healthy supermarkets initiatives are crucial to achieving potential population health benefits

  • This process evaluation found that interventions to promote healthy diets in supermarkets can be perceived as beneficial by retailers, customers, and government partners provided that barriers including staff time and intervention salience are addressed

  • The Eat Well @ IGA Randomised Controlled Trial (RCT) was a 12-month, multi-component intervention conducted between May 2017 and May 2018 in 11 Independent Grocers of Australia (IGA) supermarket stores in regional Victoria, Australia (5 intervention and 6 wait-listed control stores)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Successful implementation and long-term maintenance of healthy supermarkets initiatives are crucial to achieving potential population health benefits. Understanding barriers and enablers of implementation of realworld trials will enhance wide-scale implementation This process evaluation of a healthy supermarket intervention sought to describe (i) customer, retailer and stakeholder perspectives on the intervention; (ii) intervention implementation; and (iii) implementation barriers and enablers. Understanding the barriers and enablers of successful implementation and maintenance can provide useful information for wide-scale implementation of healthy supermarket initiatives and should be a research priority [6]. The sustainability of healthy supermarket interventions refers to both the maintenance of the intervention and capacity to sustain intervention effects into the future [7] This may depend on a number of interrelated factors associated with the interventions themselves and the context within which they are implemented. Process evaluations of previous supermarket and grocery store interventions [8,9,10,11] have identified barriers to implementation and sustainability that include excessive retailer staff time and resource requirements [9], whereas enablers included perceived high customer satisfaction [8, 9] and improved retail brand image [9]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call