Lewis Emma C, Harper Kaitlyn M, Poirier Lisa K, Gittelsohn Joel
Human Nutrition, Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Batlimore, MD.
J Public Health Res. 2021 Oct 29;11(1):2607. doi: 10.4081/jphr.2021.2607.
Small food retail stores in many underserved urban settings keep no electronic records, making documentation of program impact on sales difficult to obtain. We examined the feasibility of introducing a point-of-sale tablet (POST) application to track sales of foods and beverages in Baltimore City corner stores. A sample of four geographically and ethnically diverse corner store owners were trained to use POST to track sales of 14 items for eleven days. Feasibility was documented via a structured survey and open-ended interviews. POST had high economic and cultural acceptability, operability, and perceived sustainability, regardless of language differences or familiarity with mobile technology. All store owners reported willingness to use POST again. It is feasible to train corner store owners to use a point-of-sale application for sales monitoring. An upcoming trial will help to ensure that POST provides sufficient value added for corner store owners.
在许多服务设施不足的城市环境中,小型食品零售店没有电子记录,因此很难获得项目对销售额影响的相关文件。我们研究了引入销售点平板电脑(POST)应用程序来跟踪巴尔的摩市街角商店食品和饮料销售情况的可行性。对四家地理位置和种族各异的街角商店店主进行了抽样培训,让他们使用POST跟踪14种商品的销售情况,为期11天。通过结构化调查和开放式访谈记录了其可行性。无论语言差异或对移动技术的熟悉程度如何,POST都具有很高的经济和文化可接受性、可操作性以及感知到的可持续性。所有店主都表示愿意再次使用POST。培训街角商店店主使用销售点应用程序进行销售监测是可行的。即将进行的试验将有助于确保POST为街角商店店主提供足够的附加值。