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Conclusion

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Based on the findings reviewed here, the spread of supermarkets in Kenya has dissimilar effects for different groups of people. Supermarket shopping increases the consumption of processed foods, meat and fish, dairy and eggs, and vegetable oils, while it decreases the consumption of unprocessed staples and fresh fruits and vegetables. For adults, these dietary changes through supermarkets mean significant increases in BMI and diet-related NCDs. The studies showed higher levels of blood sugar and increased likelihoods of being overweight/obese, pre-diabetic, and suffering from the metabolic syndrome. While these effects clearly underline the contribution of supermarkets to the nutrition transition and the obesity pandemic in LMICs, the effects of supermarkets on children and adolescents are different. Supermarkets in Kenya do not (yet) seem to contribute to child overweight. Instead, supermarket shopping increases child linear growth and height-for-age Z-scores. The positive effect on child linear growth seems to be channeled through improved dietary quality. Despite higher levels of processed food consumption, supermarkets increase access to animal-source foods, leading to diets that are richer in protein and micronutrients. The dissimilar effects of supermarkets on adults and children are not completely surprising in the context of urban Kenya, where adult overweight/obesity rates are already high and growing further, whereas problems of child stunting are not yet overcome. Children can still grow in height through improved dietary quality, which is not the case for adults.

Most of the results reviewed here on the effects of supermarkets on adult and child nutrition are specific to Kenya and should not simply be extrapolated to other countries and regions. Related research is not available for other countries in Africa. However, we argue that some of the general findings – namely that the effects of supermarkets differ by age cohort – may also hold for other parts of SSA. Many other countries in Africa are also experiencing a rapid rise of supermarkets and a double or triple burden of malnutrition, where high rates of adult overweight/obesity coexist with child undernutrition and stunting.

The fact that supermarkets have both positive and negative nutrition and health effects makes the identification of suitable policy interventions more complex. Interventions should focus on strengthening the positive effects while reducing the negative ones to the greatest extent possible. Especially interventions that combine demand- and supply-side strategies, like economic incentives combined with educational or information campaigns, were shown to be effective in terms of changing people’s purchase and consumption behavior towards healthier foods. However, the evidence on effects of food environment interventions in African countries is very scarce. More research and political commitment will be needed to better understand food environments and their effects on diets, nutrition, and health, and to shape the demand, supply, and environmental aspects in order to increase the consumption of healthy foods among adults and children.

Hidden Hunger and the Transformation of Food Systems

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