Affordability, accessibility, opportunity: Parental motivation behind food purchases in a low-income community

By Augustus Bambridge-Sutton

- Last updated on GMT

Lower-income families often experience barriers that wealthier families don't in getting nutritional diets, research suggests. Image Source: kelvinjay/Getty Images
Lower-income families often experience barriers that wealthier families don't in getting nutritional diets, research suggests. Image Source: kelvinjay/Getty Images

Related tags Food security Nutrition

Lower income families often tend to have poorer outcomes when it comes dietary nutrition and obesity. A study of a low-income area in Birmingham, UK explored potential barriers to eating well.

Lower-income families, as well as families of minority ethnicities, often attain lower dietary outcomes than wealthier families of the majority ethnicity. A significant reason for this is often food environments, which, being immediate and all-encompassing, shape and form food purchasing choices at every stage.

Varying levels of food affordability, as well as availability and even accessibility, has been shown to heavily influence what foods parents buy for their children. In addition, children themselves have been shown to influence parents’ choices, with some parents buying food during schooltime to avoid being persuaded by their offspring into buying food of poor nutritional quality. Finally, lack of food preparation time influences what people buy.

This study, published in the journal Appetite, ​aimed to examine the motivations behind parental food buying choices in a low-income and ethnically diverse area of Birmingham, UK. The area, not named by the study, has a population with 64% from a black, Asian or minority ethnic background and 70% under the age of 45, with low life expectancy and higher than average levels of infant mortality.

Striving for health

The complexity of making food choices in an unstable food environment shows that it is not necessarily easy for parents to make the right such choices.

Using the COM-B approach, the study looked at parental capability, opportunity and motivation for buying the right food. Put simply, it questioned whether parents had the capability to make the food in the first place (whether they had the skills to produce the food, whether they had the facilities to cook it) whether they had the social and temporal opportunity to do so (whether they have time to cook, whether it’s socially acceptable to cook from scratch) and whether they had the motivation (whether they actually wanted to cook the food).

16 parents of children under 11 participated in the study, which was conducted as a series of semi-structured interviews. They were questioned about eating both inside and outside the home.

The study found that, while barriers towards healthy eating were experienced by the parents in question, they were nevertheless confident that they knew how ​to eat healthily. However, the same participants admitted that deciding what food to purchase was complex.

While motivation and capability were often high at an individual level, with many participants displaying strong desire and strong ability to provide healthy food for their children, barriers often cropped up at a family and community level. These barriers included time, cost and children’s preferences when it came to food. Eating outside the home was seen as a treat.

The study concluded that nutrition education was not likely to increase parental motivation to provide children with healthier diets. Instead, focusing on food palatability and enjoyment, as well as cost and affordability, was the way forward.

Sourced From: Appetite
'Understanding family food purchasing behaviour of low-income urban UK families: An analysis of parent capability, opportunity and motivation’
Published on: 4 January 2024
Doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2023.107183
Authors: C. Screti, K. Edwards, J. Blissett

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