Kimenju Simon C, Rischke Ramona, Klasen Stephan, Qaim Matin
1Tegemeo Institute of Agricultural Policy and Development,PO Box 20498 00200,NairobiKenya.
2Department of Economics,Georg-August-University of Goettingen,Goettingen,Germany.
Public Health Nutr. 2015 Dec;18(17):3224-33. doi: 10.1017/S1368980015000919. Epub 2015 Apr 15.
Many developing countries are undergoing a nutrition transition with rising rates of overweight and obesity. This nutrition transition coincides with a rapid expansion of supermarkets. The objective of the present research is to study whether supermarkets directly contribute to overweight and other changes in nutritional status.
This research builds on cross-sectional observational data. Household- and individual-level data were collected in Kenya using a quasi-experimental survey design. Instrumental variable regressions were employed to analyse the impact of supermarket purchase on nutritional status. Causal chain models were estimated to examine pathways through which supermarkets affect nutrition.
Small towns in Central Province of Kenya with and without supermarkets.
A total of 615 adults and 216 children and adolescents.
Controlling for other factors, buying in a supermarket is associated with a significantly higher BMI (P=0·018) and a higher probability of overweight (P=0·057) among adults. This effect is not observed for children and adolescents. Instead, buying in a supermarket seems to reduce child undernutrition measured by height-for-age Z-score (P=0·017). Impacts of supermarkets depend on many factors including people's initial nutritional status. For both adults and children, the nutrition effects occur through higher food energy consumption and changes in dietary composition.
Supermarkets and their food sales strategies contribute to changing food consumption habits and nutritional outcomes. Yet the types of outcomes differ by age cohort and initial nutritional status. Simple conclusions on whether supermarkets are good or bad for nutrition and public health are not justified.
许多发展中国家正在经历营养转型,超重和肥胖率不断上升。这种营养转型与超市的迅速扩张同时发生。本研究的目的是探讨超市是否直接导致超重及其他营养状况变化。
本研究基于横断面观察数据。在肯尼亚采用准实验调查设计收集家庭和个人层面的数据。采用工具变量回归分析超市购物对营养状况的影响。估计因果链模型以检验超市影响营养的途径。
肯尼亚中部省份有超市和没有超市的小镇。
共615名成年人以及216名儿童和青少年。
在控制其他因素的情况下,在超市购物与成年人中显著更高的体重指数(P = 0·018)以及超重的更高概率(P = 0·057)相关。儿童和青少年未观察到这种影响。相反,在超市购物似乎能降低以年龄别身高Z评分衡量的儿童营养不良情况(P = 0·017)。超市的影响取决于许多因素,包括人们最初的营养状况。对于成年人和儿童来说,营养影响都是通过更高的食物能量消耗和饮食构成的变化产生的。
超市及其食品销售策略有助于改变食物消费习惯和营养结果。然而,结果类型因年龄组和初始营养状况而异。关于超市对营养和公共卫生是好是坏得出简单结论是不合理的。