Paying for convenience: Comparing the cost of takeaway meals with their healthier home-cooked counterparts in New Zealand

© 2017 The Authors. Objective Convenience and cost impact on people's meal decisions. Takeaway and pre-prepared foods save preparation time but may contribute to poorer-quality diets. Analysing the impact of time on relative cost differences between meals of varying convenience contributes to u...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: MacKay, S., Vandevijvere, S., Xie, P., Lee, Andy, Swinburn, B.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Cambridge University Press 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/68503
_version_ 1848761818557710336
author MacKay, S.
Vandevijvere, S.
Xie, P.
Lee, Andy
Swinburn, B.
author_facet MacKay, S.
Vandevijvere, S.
Xie, P.
Lee, Andy
Swinburn, B.
author_sort MacKay, S.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description © 2017 The Authors. Objective Convenience and cost impact on people's meal decisions. Takeaway and pre-prepared foods save preparation time but may contribute to poorer-quality diets. Analysing the impact of time on relative cost differences between meals of varying convenience contributes to understanding the barrier of time to selecting healthy meals. Design Six popular New Zealand takeaway meals were identified from two large national surveys and compared with similar, but healthier, home-made and home-assembled meals that met nutrition targets consistent with New Zealand Eating and Activity Guidelines. The cost of each complete meal, cost per kilogram, and confidence intervals of the cost of each meal type were calculated. The time-inclusive cost was calculated by adding waiting or preparation time cost at the minimum wage. Setting A large urban area in New Zealand. Results For five of six popular meals, the mean cost of the home-made and home-assembled meals was cheaper than the takeaway meals. When the cost of time was added, all home-assembled meal options were the cheapest and half of the home-made meals were at least as expensive as the takeaway meals. The home-prepared meals were designed to provide less saturated fat and Na and more vegetables than their takeaway counterparts; however, the home-assembled meals provided more Na than the home-made meals. Conclusions Healthier home-made and home-assembled meals were, except one, cheaper options than takeaways. When the cost of time was added, either the home-made or the takeaway meal was the most expensive. This research questions whether takeaways are better value than home-prepared meals.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T10:37:43Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-68503
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T10:37:43Z
publishDate 2017
publisher Cambridge University Press
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-685032018-06-29T12:34:53Z Paying for convenience: Comparing the cost of takeaway meals with their healthier home-cooked counterparts in New Zealand MacKay, S. Vandevijvere, S. Xie, P. Lee, Andy Swinburn, B. © 2017 The Authors. Objective Convenience and cost impact on people's meal decisions. Takeaway and pre-prepared foods save preparation time but may contribute to poorer-quality diets. Analysing the impact of time on relative cost differences between meals of varying convenience contributes to understanding the barrier of time to selecting healthy meals. Design Six popular New Zealand takeaway meals were identified from two large national surveys and compared with similar, but healthier, home-made and home-assembled meals that met nutrition targets consistent with New Zealand Eating and Activity Guidelines. The cost of each complete meal, cost per kilogram, and confidence intervals of the cost of each meal type were calculated. The time-inclusive cost was calculated by adding waiting or preparation time cost at the minimum wage. Setting A large urban area in New Zealand. Results For five of six popular meals, the mean cost of the home-made and home-assembled meals was cheaper than the takeaway meals. When the cost of time was added, all home-assembled meal options were the cheapest and half of the home-made meals were at least as expensive as the takeaway meals. The home-prepared meals were designed to provide less saturated fat and Na and more vegetables than their takeaway counterparts; however, the home-assembled meals provided more Na than the home-made meals. Conclusions Healthier home-made and home-assembled meals were, except one, cheaper options than takeaways. When the cost of time was added, either the home-made or the takeaway meal was the most expensive. This research questions whether takeaways are better value than home-prepared meals. 2017 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/68503 10.1017/S1368980017000805 Cambridge University Press restricted
spellingShingle MacKay, S.
Vandevijvere, S.
Xie, P.
Lee, Andy
Swinburn, B.
Paying for convenience: Comparing the cost of takeaway meals with their healthier home-cooked counterparts in New Zealand
title Paying for convenience: Comparing the cost of takeaway meals with their healthier home-cooked counterparts in New Zealand
title_full Paying for convenience: Comparing the cost of takeaway meals with their healthier home-cooked counterparts in New Zealand
title_fullStr Paying for convenience: Comparing the cost of takeaway meals with their healthier home-cooked counterparts in New Zealand
title_full_unstemmed Paying for convenience: Comparing the cost of takeaway meals with their healthier home-cooked counterparts in New Zealand
title_short Paying for convenience: Comparing the cost of takeaway meals with their healthier home-cooked counterparts in New Zealand
title_sort paying for convenience: comparing the cost of takeaway meals with their healthier home-cooked counterparts in new zealand
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/68503