Home Food Shoppers ignore government COVID-19 advice to shop ‘infrequently’: Data

Shoppers ignore government COVID-19 advice to shop ‘infrequently’: Data

0
Shoppers ignore government COVID-19 advice to shop ‘infrequently’: Data

Since lockdown was introduced in the UK last month, restrictions on movement and social interaction have been imposed throughout the country.

Official government guidance suggests that while people are still allowed to shop for groceries this should only be for ‘essentials’ and shopping trips should be as ‘infrequent as possible’.

Some government ministers have gone further in press interviews and briefings. Transport secretary Grant Shapps told the BBC​ that people should ‘try and shop just once a week’ and ‘just do the essentials, not everything else’.

While restrictions on supermarket visits are not currently enforced, the official message is that supermarkets are a higher-risk area for transmission of COVID-19.

Many shops have placed restrictions on the number of people allowed in at a time to support social distancing efforts that require people to stand two metres apart. Today (3 April), Sainsbury’s banned couples from shopping together to limit traffic. The move follows a similar move from Waitrose, which introduced a ‘one person per household’ rule last weekend.

However, new data from HIM & MCA Insight’s new shopper tracker, Channel Pulse, reveals that shoppers are apparently not heeding calls to keep their supermarket visits to a bare minimum.

Channel Pulse demonstrated that between 23 and 27 March 2020 the average convenience retail shoppers visited a c-store 2.1 times, supermarket shoppers visited 1.8 times and discounters 1.8 times over the course of the five-day period.