An explorative study with convenience vegetables in urban Nigeria - The Veg-on-Wheels intervention

Nigerian consumers have been found to view vegetables as healthy and health is a principal motivation for consumption; however, consumers also experience barriers related to preparation time and availability of vegetables. We therefore conducted a Veg-on-Wheels intervention, in which ready-to-cook,...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Snoek, Henriette M., Raaijmakers, Ireen, Lawal, Oruranti M., Reinders, Machiel J.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/126344
_version_ 1855536982352986112
author Snoek, Henriette M.
Raaijmakers, Ireen
Lawal, Oruranti M.
Reinders, Machiel J.
author_browse Lawal, Oruranti M.
Raaijmakers, Ireen
Reinders, Machiel J.
Snoek, Henriette M.
author_facet Snoek, Henriette M.
Raaijmakers, Ireen
Lawal, Oruranti M.
Reinders, Machiel J.
author_sort Snoek, Henriette M.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Nigerian consumers have been found to view vegetables as healthy and health is a principal motivation for consumption; however, consumers also experience barriers related to preparation time and availability of vegetables. We therefore conducted a Veg-on-Wheels intervention, in which ready-to-cook, washed and pre-cut green leafy vegetables (GLV) were kept cool and sold for five weeks at convenient locations near workplaces and on the open market in Akure, Nigeria. Surveys were conducted prior to the intervention with 680 consumers and during the final week of the intervention with 596 consumers near workplaces and 204 consumers at the open market. Both buyers and non-buyers of the intervention were included; 49% buyers in the workplace sample and 47% in the open market sample. The Veg-on-Wheels intervention was successful, with high awareness, positive attitudes and high customer satisfaction. GLV intake was higher for Veg-on-Wheels buyers compared with non-buyers after the intervention, i.e., 10.8 vs. 8.0 portions per week, respectively. Also the intake of other vegetables was higher in the intervention group. The motives and barriers for buyers and non-buyers differed across the selling locations: main barriers were trust in the vendor and GLV source. These trust issues and vendor preferences were viewed as more important to respondents at the market than those near workplaces. This study is the first intervention study on the selling of ready-to-cook convenience vegetables in urban Nigeria. It shows that a market exists for convenience vegetables and that they have the potential to increase vegetable intake. Insights on both the food environment and consumers’ motives and behaviour was crucial for designing and evaluating the intervention.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace126344
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1263442025-10-26T12:55:57Z An explorative study with convenience vegetables in urban Nigeria - The Veg-on-Wheels intervention Snoek, Henriette M. Raaijmakers, Ireen Lawal, Oruranti M. Reinders, Machiel J. consumers vegetable health consumption markets nutrition behaviour Nigerian consumers have been found to view vegetables as healthy and health is a principal motivation for consumption; however, consumers also experience barriers related to preparation time and availability of vegetables. We therefore conducted a Veg-on-Wheels intervention, in which ready-to-cook, washed and pre-cut green leafy vegetables (GLV) were kept cool and sold for five weeks at convenient locations near workplaces and on the open market in Akure, Nigeria. Surveys were conducted prior to the intervention with 680 consumers and during the final week of the intervention with 596 consumers near workplaces and 204 consumers at the open market. Both buyers and non-buyers of the intervention were included; 49% buyers in the workplace sample and 47% in the open market sample. The Veg-on-Wheels intervention was successful, with high awareness, positive attitudes and high customer satisfaction. GLV intake was higher for Veg-on-Wheels buyers compared with non-buyers after the intervention, i.e., 10.8 vs. 8.0 portions per week, respectively. Also the intake of other vegetables was higher in the intervention group. The motives and barriers for buyers and non-buyers differed across the selling locations: main barriers were trust in the vendor and GLV source. These trust issues and vendor preferences were viewed as more important to respondents at the market than those near workplaces. This study is the first intervention study on the selling of ready-to-cook convenience vegetables in urban Nigeria. It shows that a market exists for convenience vegetables and that they have the potential to increase vegetable intake. Insights on both the food environment and consumers’ motives and behaviour was crucial for designing and evaluating the intervention. 2022-09-29 2022-12-27T15:33:36Z 2022-12-27T15:33:36Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/126344 en Open Access Snoek, Henriette M.; Raaijmakers, Ireen; Lawal, Oruranti M.; Reinders, Machiel J. 2022. An explorative study with convenience vegetables in urban Nigeria - The Veg-on-Wheels intervention. PLoS ONE
spellingShingle consumers
vegetable
health
consumption
markets
nutrition
behaviour
Snoek, Henriette M.
Raaijmakers, Ireen
Lawal, Oruranti M.
Reinders, Machiel J.
An explorative study with convenience vegetables in urban Nigeria - The Veg-on-Wheels intervention
title An explorative study with convenience vegetables in urban Nigeria - The Veg-on-Wheels intervention
title_full An explorative study with convenience vegetables in urban Nigeria - The Veg-on-Wheels intervention
title_fullStr An explorative study with convenience vegetables in urban Nigeria - The Veg-on-Wheels intervention
title_full_unstemmed An explorative study with convenience vegetables in urban Nigeria - The Veg-on-Wheels intervention
title_short An explorative study with convenience vegetables in urban Nigeria - The Veg-on-Wheels intervention
title_sort explorative study with convenience vegetables in urban nigeria the veg on wheels intervention
topic consumers
vegetable
health
consumption
markets
nutrition
behaviour
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/126344
work_keys_str_mv AT snoekhenriettem anexplorativestudywithconveniencevegetablesinurbannigeriathevegonwheelsintervention
AT raaijmakersireen anexplorativestudywithconveniencevegetablesinurbannigeriathevegonwheelsintervention
AT lawalorurantim anexplorativestudywithconveniencevegetablesinurbannigeriathevegonwheelsintervention
AT reindersmachielj anexplorativestudywithconveniencevegetablesinurbannigeriathevegonwheelsintervention
AT snoekhenriettem explorativestudywithconveniencevegetablesinurbannigeriathevegonwheelsintervention
AT raaijmakersireen explorativestudywithconveniencevegetablesinurbannigeriathevegonwheelsintervention
AT lawalorurantim explorativestudywithconveniencevegetablesinurbannigeriathevegonwheelsintervention
AT reindersmachielj explorativestudywithconveniencevegetablesinurbannigeriathevegonwheelsintervention