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BACKGROUND: There is a growing concern, but limited evidence, that price promotions contribute to a poor diet and the social patterning of diet-related disease. OBJECTIVE: We examined the following questions: 1) Are less-healthy foods more likely to be promoted than healthier foods? 2) Are consumers more responsive to promotions on less-healthy products? 3) Are there socioeconomic differences in food purchases in response to price promotions? DESIGN: With the use of hierarchical regression, we analyzed data on purchases of 11,323 products within 135 food and beverage categories from 26,986 households in Great Britain during 2010. Major supermarkets operated the same price promotions in all branches. The number of stores that offered price promotions on each product for each week was used to measure the frequency of price promotions. We assessed the healthiness of each product by using a nutrient profiling (NP) model. RESULTS: A total of 6788 products (60%) were in healthier categories and 4535 products (40%) were in less-healthy categories. There was no significant gap in the frequency of promotion by the healthiness of products neither within nor between categories. However, after we controlled for the reference price, price discount rate, and brand-specific effects, the sales uplift arising from price promotions was larger in less-healthy than in healthier categories; a 1-SD point increase in the category mean NP score, implying the category becomes less healthy, was associated with an additional 7.7-percentage point increase in sales (from 27.3% to 35.0%; P < 0.01). The magnitude of the sales uplift from promotions was larger for higher-socioeconomic status (SES) groups than for lower ones (34.6% for the high-SES group, 28.1% for the middle-SES group, and 23.1% for the low-SES group). Finally, there was no significant SES gap in the absolute volume of purchases of less-healthy foods made on promotion. CONCLUSION: Attempts to limit promotions on less-healthy foods could improve the population diet but would be unlikely to reduce health inequalities arising from poorer diets in low-socioeconomic groups.

Original publication

DOI

10.3945/ajcn.114.094227

Type

Journal article

Journal

Am J Clin Nutr

Publication Date

04/2015

Volume

101

Pages

808 - 816

Keywords

Great Britain, food purchasing, price promotion, public health, public policy, Adult, Advertising, Beverages, Cross-Sectional Studies, Diet, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Family Characteristics, Female, Food, Organic, Health Promotion, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Theoretical, Regression Analysis, Socioeconomic Factors, United Kingdom