Abstract

Citation

Furey S, Farley H, Strugnell C. An investigation into the availability and economic accessibility of food items in rural and urban areas of northern Ireland. Int J Consum Stud 2002;26(4):313-321.

Abstract source: onlinelibrary.wiley.com

The question of access to food has three components: physical access to food, financial access to food and access to information about food. This study explores the issue of financial access to food. The affordability of food is a major consideration for consumers, an important marketing tool for retailers and a principal theme in food policy. Research methods included a comparative shopping exercise (shopping basket analysis) in 109 stores across four towns (two urban and two rural) in Northern Ireland. Store type included multiples (major supermarket chains) and symbol group stores (those stores operating under a franchise from one main buying group). Results indicate that in the main it is cheaper to buy from the multiples, shopping from a symbol group store can incur cost penalties of up to 39.4% above the multiples’ prices. Price disparities, analysed using z-scores, were apparent between towns and across store types. Similarly, an availability audit of foodstuffs portrayed the multiples as the most comprehensive from which to shop, whereas symbol group stores fared poorly in the availability of fresh green vegetables, carcass meat and wholemeal breads. This is an important issue because it plays an integral part in the health inequality debate and also relates to social exclusion. Fundamentally, financial access to food impinges upon the whole question of food-purchasing behaviour in terms of accessibility, affordability and availability. Therefore, economic access to food can be used as a useful precursor to a comprehensive analysis of food access in its entirety. It is also useful as an indicator of social exclusion. This study seeks to inform and influence the food policy debate.

Full Text

not available

At A Glance

Food Environment Variables

# Type of Environment/Institution
109Total Environments/Locations
21Supermarket
88Symbol group stores (food stores that operate a franchise under the same main buying group)
Measure objective perceived
Availability/Access
Affordability/Pricing
Food Group/Type of Food
Fruits and vegetables
Low-fat dairy
Whole grains
Foods of minimal nutritional value
Meat/fish/poultry/eggs
Low-fat foods other than dairy
Market Basket

Domain(s)

Food Environment

Measure Type

Environmental observation

Measure Availability

Measure included in article

Number of Items

26 Reported

Study location

Metro/Urban, Small Town/Rural

Northern Ireland

Ballymena, Coleraine, Londonderry and Strabane

Languages

English

Information about Development of Measure

Nothing to add

Study Design

Study Participants

Age

Not applicable

Sex

Not applicable

Race/Ethnicity

White

Predominantly Low-income/Low-SES

Yes

Sample Size

252517

Study Design

Design Type

Descriptive

Health Outcomes Assessed

None

Obesity Measures

Not applicable

BMI Measured or Self-reported

Not applicable

Covariates

Not reported

Data Reported on Race/Ethnicity

Qualitative description

Data Reported on SES

Quantitative data for community or area

SES-related Variables

Employment/Unemployment

-

How To Use

Administration

Who Administered

Researcher-administered

How Administered

In-person

Time Required

Not reported

Training Required

Not reported

Instructions on Use

Not reported

Data Analysis

Data Collection/Analysis Costs

Not available

Data Collection/Protocol

Not available

Instructions on Data Analysis

Not reported

Validity (0)

There are no validity tests reported for this measure.

Reliability (0)

There are no reliability tests reported for this measure.