Published in:
01-07-2011 | Regular Article
Point-of-purchase health information encourages customers to purchase vegetables: objective analysis by using a point-of-sales system
Authors:
Yoshiko Ogawa, Naohito Tanabe, Akiko Honda, Tomoko Azuma, Nao Seki, Tsubasa Suzuki, Hiroshi Suzuki
Published in:
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine
|
Issue 4/2011
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Abstract
Objectives
Point-of-purchase (POP) information at food stores could help promote healthy dietary habits. However, it has been difficult to evaluate the effects of such intervention on customers’ behavior. We objectively evaluated the usefulness of POP health information for vegetables in the modification of customers’ purchasing behavior by using the database of a point-of-sales (POS) system.
Methods
Two supermarket stores belonging to the same chain were assigned as the intervention store (store I) and control store (store C). POP health information for vegetables was presented in store I for 60 days. The percent increase in daily sales of vegetables over the sales on the same date of the previous year was compared between the stores by using the database of the POS system, adjusting for the change in monthly visitors from the previous year (adjusted ∆sales).
Results
The adjusted ∆sales significantly increased during the intervention period (Spearman’s ρ = 0.258, P for trend = 0.006) at store I but did not increase at store C (ρ = −0.037, P for trend = 0.728). The growth of the mean adjusted ∆sales of total vegetables from 30 days before the intervention period through the latter half of the intervention period was estimated to be greater at store I than at store C by 18.7 percentage points (95% confidence interval 1.6–35.9).
Conclusions
Health-related POP information for vegetables in supermarkets can encourage customers to purchase and, probably, consume vegetables.