Article

Healthy snacks in hospitals: testing the potential effects of changes in availability

Details

Citation

Allan J, Duthie S, Heddle M, McKenzie F, Webb S & Johnston M (2021) Healthy snacks in hospitals: testing the potential effects of changes in availability. Nutrition and Health, 27 (3), pp. 321-327. https://doi.org/10.1177/0260106021996921

Abstract
Background: Hospitals offer snacks for sale to patients, staff and visitors. Aim: As food choice is heavily influenced by the options available, the present study (a) audited snack availability and purchase in NHS hospital sites across a large UK city; and (b) tested the potential effects of changes to this availability in an online choice experiment. Methods: In Study 1 (audit), single-serve snacks (n=376) available in 76 hospital food retail units were audited. Purchasing data were obtained from six food retail units over four weeks (27,989 sales). In Study 2 (online experiment), participants (n=159) chose snacks from pictured ranges containing 25% (minority), 50% (equivalent) or 75% (majority) healthy options. Results: Available single-serve snacks varied markedly in calorie (18–641 kcals), fat (0–39 g), sugar (0.1–76 g) and salt (0–2.9 g). Only 30% of available snacks were healthy options and only 25% of the most commonly purchased snacks were healthy options. In Study 2, snack choice was significantly associated with the availability of healthy options in the choice array (X2 (2)= 59.71, p<.01). More participants made healthy choices when product ranges contained 75% healthy options compared to 50% (p<.01) and 50% healthy options compared with 25% (p<.01). Conclusions: Healthy snacks are readily available in NHS sites but there is a greater relative variety of unhealthy snack products. Many consumers continue to purchase unhealthy items. Further increasing the availability and variety of healthy options may support consumers to make healthier choices.

Keywords
Snacking; hospital; food choice; availability; healthy choice

Journal
Nutrition and Health: Volume 27, Issue 3

StatusPublished
FundersChief Scientist Office
Publication date30/09/2021
Publication date online26/03/2021
Date accepted by journal26/02/2021
PublisherSage Publications
ISSN0260-1060
eISSN2047-945X

People (1)

Professor Julia Allan

Professor Julia Allan

Professor in Psychology, Psychology