Author:
Hopkins Sarah,Soon Jan Mei
Abstract
Purpose
Coeliac disease (CD) is a life-long condition requiring strict adherence to a gluten-free (GF) diet. Due to wide claims of availability and lower costs of gluten-free food (GFF) and clinical commissioning groups (CCGs) in England needing to save costs, access to prescriptions for patients with CD is being limited in England. The purpose of this paper is to investigate the availability and cost of GFF in an area where patients with CD have restricted access to prescriptions and to assess the nutritional composition of GFFs available in comparison with foods containing gluten (FCG).
Design/methodology/approach
Eight food categories that were representative of a range of commonly purchased GFFs were selected. Availability and cost of the cheapest and most expensive branded and non-branded GFFs and gluten containing equivalents were surveyed at physical stores (n=19) and online stores (n=8). The nutritional composition of some of the widely available GFFs identified (n=190) and comparable FCGs (n=218) were calculated using MyFitnessPal.
Findings
None of the budget stores or corner shops surveyed stocked any of the surveyed cereal-based GFFs. Online stores had more availability than physical stores; however, there was no significant difference in cost. GFFs cost, on average, 2.18 times more than FCG. When making nutritional comparisons with gluten-containing food, protein content was lower across 55 per cent of GFF categories. There was significantly less sugar in GF brown bread, crackers, and wholegrain pasta compared with those containing gluten (CG). Another main finding was GF ready-meals contained significantly less salt than ready-meals CG.
Originality/value
Limited resources and perceived wide availability of GF products resulted in reduced GF prescriptions to patients in England. The findings in this study revealed that there is no availability of cereal-based GFFs in budget stores, high cost and limited access to prescriptions can influence adherence to a GF diet and is most likely to affect patients from deprived groups. This study recommends that the prescription of GFF to patients with CD should be continued.
Subject
Food Science,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)
Reference71 articles.
1. Nutritive value of pseudocereals and their increasing use as functional gluten-free ingredients;Trends in Food Science & Technology,2010
2. A comparison of the nutritional status between adult celiac patients on a long-term, strictly gluten-free diet and healthy subjects;European Journal of Clinical Nutrition,2016
3. BDA (2015), “Policy statement: gluten free food on prescription.British Dietetics Association, available at: www.bda.uk.com/improvinghealth/healthprofessionals/policy_statement_gluten_free_food_on_prescription (accessed 17 April 2018).
4. Brafton (2013), “95 Percent of web traffic goes to sites on page 1 of Google SERPS [Study]”, available at: www.brafton.com/news/95-percent-of-web-traffic-goes-to-sites-on-page-1-of-google-serps-study/ (accessed 11 April 2018).
Cited by
16 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献