Some
of
the
fastest
growing
countries
in
the
world
are
set
for
dietary
disaster
as
the
trend
of
convenience
store
and
supermarket
dominance
takes
hold,
according
to
a
new
global
study
released
today
on
World
Obesity
Day.
MELBOURNE,
AUSTRALIA
–
Media
OutReach
Newswire
–
4
March
2025
–
Just
published
in
Nature
Food,
the
study
by
researchers
from
Deakin
University
in
Australia
and
experts
from
UNICEF,
unveils
a
seismic
shift
in
the
types
of
food
stores
springing
up
globally
over
the
past
15
years,
with
serious
health
implications
for
vulnerable
low
and
middle-income
countries.
Analysing
data
from
97
countries
on
retail
changes
over
the
last
15
years,
the
study
showed
that
the
number
of
chain
supermarkets,
hypermarkets
and
convenience
stores
per
10,000
people
increased
by
23.6%
globally
over
the
period.
With
market
domination
by
these
types
of
retailers
being
the
norm
in
high-income
countries,
low
and
middle-income
countries
are
copying
the
trend
and
catching
up
fast.
In
South
Asia
and
Southeast
Asia,
the
number
of
chain
retail
outlets
per
person
has
increased
by
nearly
10%
per
year,
with
a
corresponding
drop
off
in
independently
owned
traditional
stores.
And
in
a
sign
that
retail
is
set
for
an
even
bigger
shake
up,
grocery
sales
from
digital
retailers
increased
by
325%
over
a
10-year
period
across
27
countries.
In
a
clear
indication
that
more
supermarkets
and
convenience
stores
are
bad
for
our
health,
the
researchers
showed
for
the
first
time
that
at
a
global
scale,
change
in
the
density
of
chain
retail
outlets
and
the
increasing
amount
of
unhealthy
food
sold
by
them
was
associated
with
an
increase
in
the
prevalence
of
obesity,
which
continues
to
rise
in
every
region
of
the
world
and
is
very
much
a
global
concern.
And
how
does
the
increase
in
the
number
of
chain
retailers
impact
our
health?
According
to
the
study’s
lead
author
Dr
Tailane
Scapin,
from
Deakin
University:
“Large
chain
retailers
usually
hold
significant
market
power,
using
their
dominance
over
food
manufacturers
to
determine
what
food
is
available
and
what
price
it’s
sold
at,
which
has
led
to
the
widespread
availability
of
unhealthy
foods.
“Large
chain
retailers
and
food
manufacturers
also
use
aggressive
marketing
strategies
to
promote
unhealthy
foods,
contributing
to
poor
dietary
habits
and,
as
consequence,
negatively
impacting
their
customers’
health.”
Dr
Scapin
said
that
immediate
action
was
needed
to
address
the
impact
of
changing
retail
food
environments.
“Our
findings
underscore
the
importance
of
regulating
the
retail
environment
to
make
sure
that
it’s
healthy
foods
that
are
promoted,
while
the
marketing
and
promotion
of
unhealthy
food
products
is
limited.
“In
low
and
middle-income
countries
where
supermarkets
and
convenience
stores
are
spreading
the
fastest,
governments
have
a
time-limited
opportunity
to
make
sure
that
these
new,
modern
retail
stores
actually
promote
healthy
food.
We
know
from
the
experience
in
North
America,
Europe
and
other
high-income
regions
that
once
retailers
are
established,
they
are
very
hard
to
change.”
The
study’s
research
team
called
for
urgent
action
from
governments,
from
retailers
and
from
the
health
promotion
workforce
to
prioritise
healthier
retail
food
environments
that
support
sustainable
and
healthy
dietary
patterns
and
positive
public
health
outcomes.
“With
this
research
published
on
World
Obesity
Day
which
has
a
theme
of
‘Changing
systems
for
healthier
lives’,
it’s
important
that
the
promising
action
being
taken
by
forward-thinking
retailers
and
governments
is
scaled
up
globally,”
Dr
Scapin
said.
The
full
study
report,
with
data
by
country,
by
geographic
region
and
by
country
income
group,
appears
in
the
publication
in
Nature
Food
and
in
an
interactive
dashboard
here.
https://iht.deakin.edu.au/our-research/global-centre-for-preventive-health-and-nutrition/
https://x.com/GLOBE_Deakin
Hashtag: #healthyfoodretail #globalhealth #healthyfoodresearch #research #WorldObesityDay #WOD #DeakinUniversity #GLOBE #populationhealth
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