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Cambridge University Press, Public Health Nutrition, 15(18), p. 2742-2749, 2014

DOI: 10.1017/s1368980014002730

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The effect of changes in visibility and price on fruit purchasing at a university cafeteria in Lima, Peru

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo determine the effect of increasing fruit visibility, adding information and lowering price on fruit purchasing at a university cafeteria in Lima, Peru.DesignQuasi-experimental pilot study of a three-phase stepped intervention. In Phase 1, fruit was displayed >3 m from the point of purchase with no additional information. Phase 2 consisted in displaying the fruit near the point of purchase with added health and price information. Phase 3 added a 33 % price reduction. The duration of each phase was 3 weeks and phases were separated by 2-week breaks. Primary outcomes were total pieces of fruit and number of meals sold daily.SettingA university cafeteria in Lima, Peru.SubjectsApproximately 150 people, students and non-student adults, who purchased food daily. Twelve students participated in post-intervention interviews.ResultsFruit purchasing doubled from Phase 1 to Phase 3 (P<0·01) and remained significant after adjusting for the number of meals sold daily (P<0·05). There was no evidence of a difference in fruit sold between the other phases. Females purchased 100 % of the fruit in Phase 1, 82 % in Phase 2 and 67 % in Phase 3 (P<0·01). Males increased their purchasing significantly between Phase 1 and 3 (P<0·01). Non-student adults purchased more fruit with each phase (P<0·05) whereas students did not. Qualitatively, the most common reason for not purchasing fruit was a marked preference to buy unhealthy snack foods.ConclusionsPromoting fruit consumption by product placement close to the point of purchase, adding health information and price reduction had a positive effect on fruit purchasing in a university cafeteria, especially in males and non-student adults.