Table 4.
Measure | Mean | SD | Range |
---|---|---|---|
Level of difficulty or satisfaction* | |||
Services provided by NCDA&CS† | 1·25 | 0·43 | 1–2 |
Services provided by other local professionals† | 1·25 | 0·43 | 1–2 |
Marketing efforts by NCDA&CS† | 1·75 | 0·83 | 1–3 |
Equipment for the healthy food items† | 2·25 | 1·09 | 1–4 |
Difficulty in stocking healthier items† | 2·50 | 1·12 | 1–4 |
Impact of HFSRP participation on business* | |||
Agree resulted in an increase in overall sales‡ | 4·0 | ||
Agree sell more nutrient-dense foods‡ | 5·0 | ||
Impact on customers* | |||
Interested in learning more about healthy eating‡ | 4·5 | ||
Satisfied with the new healthier options‡ | 5·0 | ||
Programme impact and effectiveness§ | |||
Healthy food supply score – annual change|| | 2·31 | 1·84 | 0·75–5·25 |
Healthy food supply score – investment effectiveness¶ | 0·12 | 0·11 | 0·03–0·31 |
Healthy eating index – annual change|| | 2·51 | 5·50 | −2·77–10·09 |
Healthy eating index – investment effectiveness¶ | 0·10 | 0·22 | −0·11–0·41 |
NCDA&CS, North Carolina Department of Agriculture & Consumer Services; HFSRP, Healthy Food Small Retailer Program; HFS, Healthy Food Supply; HEI, Healthy Eating Index.
These responses are drawn from all (five) respondents who completed the HFSRP Evaluation.
Level of satisfaction and difficulty are measured using a five-point Likert scales; lower values indicate higher levels of satisfaction (very satisfied =1), lower level of difficulty (very easy =1).
Responses are scored as: Yes (1), Somewhat (0·5), No (0).
Data from the following stores were used in calculating the index scores: Healthy Food Supply Scores – S1, S3, S5, S6; Healthy Eating Index – S1, S2, S4, S5, S6.
Annual change reflects the change in scores from a baseline period to 1 year after starting HFSRP participation.
Investment Effectiveness is estimated as the change in HFS Score (or HEI) per US$1000 HFSRP investment. The amount of grant funds awarded to one store (S2) are not available.