4.1 Article

Comparing Online and In-Store Grocery Purchases

Journal

JOURNAL OF NUTRITION EDUCATION AND BEHAVIOR
Volume 53, Issue 6, Pages 471-479

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jneb.2021.03.001

Keywords

internet; food preferences; consumer behavior; food; grocery

Funding

  1. Healthy Eating Research , a national program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation [72062]
  2. National Institute for Food and Agriculture/US Department of Agriculture [2016-68001-24961]
  3. John T. Gorman Foundation [2015-034]

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The study found that online shoppers spent 44% more per transaction and purchased more items compared to in-store shoppers. Additionally, online shopping was associated with reduced spending on certain unhealthy, impulse-sensitive foods such as candy, cold or frozen desserts, and grain-based desserts. Grocery-based healthy eating initiatives could utilize online ordering platforms to enhance their reach and effectiveness.
Objective: To describe the grocery shopping patterns of people who shopped both online and in-store and evaluate whether shoppers purchased fewer unhealthy, impulse-sensitive items online. Design: Secondary analysis of 44 weeks of grocery transaction data collected for fruit and vegetable incentive trials in 2 Maine supermarkets. Participants: A total of 137 primary household shoppers who shopped at least once in-store and online (curbside pickup) for 5,573 total transactions Main Outcome Measures and Analysis: Paired t tests and descriptive analyses compared online and in-store transactions with respect to frequency, total spending, number of items purchased, and spending on 10 food groups and 34 subgroups. Mixed-effects regression models estimated differences in online vs in-store spending on 5 unhealthy, impulse-sensitive subgroups. Results: When shopping online, participants spent 44% more per transaction ($113.58 vs $78.88, P < 0.001) and purchased more items (38.3 vs 26.6 items/transaction, P < 0.001). Compared with in-store, shopping online was associated with reduced spending per transaction on candy (-$0.65, P < 0.001), cold or frozen desserts (-$0.52, P < 0.001), and grain-based desserts (-$1.29, P < 0.001). Conclusions and Implications: Online shopping was associated with lower spending on certain unhealthy, impulse-sensitive foods. Grocery-based healthy eating initiatives might leverage online ordering platforms to increase their reach and effectiveness.

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