#### Marco D'Addario <sup>a</sup> , Massimo Labra b, Silvia Mari <sup>a</sup> , Raffaele Matacena b, Mariangela Zenga <sup>c</sup> <sup>a</sup> Department of Psychology, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy; <sup>b</sup> Department of Biotechnologies and Biosciences, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy; <sup>c</sup> Department of Statistics and Quantitative Methods, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy **An analysis of the transaction towards sustainable food consumption practises during the Italian lockdown for SARS-CoV-2: the experience of the Lombardy region**

An analysis of the transaction towards sustainable food consumption practises during the Italian lockdown for SARS-CoV-2: the experience of the Lombardy region

Marco D'Addario, Massimo Labra, Silvia Mari, Raffaele Matacena, Mariangela Zenga

## 1. Introduction

In the pandemia for SARS-CoV-2, food occupies a central position (Galimberti et al., 2020). During the lockdown period, the attention has been devoted to the activities and behaviors related to nutrition, considering also the acts of purchasing, cooking and consuming food. In a context in which working-day out-of-home and school meals were no longer available, people forcely prepared and consumed their meals at home.

This work is part of an ongoing research that analyzes the effects of the pandemic on the healthiness and sustainability of food-related behaviors. It does so by means of an empirical investigation carried out in Lombardy region, the region severely hit by the coronavirus pandemic in Italy. Within this frame, the specific objective of this work is to assess whether behavioral and attitudinal patterns related to consuming food have changed with respect to the established habits of 'ordinary' periods, and how these transformations are linked to socio-demograhic information of respondents.

### 2. The survey and the sample

An online survey was administered in May-June 2020, employing the Computer Assisted Web Interview (CAWI) methodology. The survey was designed to link data about sociodemographics and living conditions, with self-reported changes in practices related to food consumption, cooking and food shopping. Moreover, data about the psychological condition during the lockdown, weight management, physical activity and health status, and food- and sustainability-related opinions, attitudes and future intentions were recorded.

Of the 2288 complete responses recorded, we consider only n = 1540 respondents living in Lombardy that was the region most affected by the SARS-CoV-2 during the period February-May 2020. As shown in Table 1, 51.6% of respndents were provided by participants who identify themselves as females. The average age was 48.79 years (sd=17.43). The level of education of the sample is imbalanced towards higher educational attainments: 63.8% of respondents hold a graduate or a post-graduate degree. The sample was characterized by higher-than-average levels of socio-economic well-being (measured by MacArthur Scale of Subjective Social Status (Adler et al. (2000)) with a mean value of 6.24 (sd=1.33). Most respondents (51.7%) had a normal weight, while the 45.1% was overweighted or obese. Moreover, 80.1% of respondents declared to follow an omnivore diet.

A large proportion of respondents (34.4%) declared a worsening effect of the SARS-CoV-2 emergency on their economic conditions. From the point of view of work, 53.8% of the sample reported having worked from home, while 9.4% declared not having worked at all in the period

<sup>109</sup> Marco D'Addario, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy, marco.daddario@unimib.it, 0000-0002-7659-885X Massimo Labra, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy, massimo.labra@unimib.it, 0000-0003-1065-5804 Silvia Mari, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy, silvia.mari@unimib.it, 0000-0001-6543-5249 Raffaele Matacena, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy, raffaele.matacena@unimib.it, 0000-0003-2689-1545 Mariangela Zenga, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy, mariangela.zenga@unimib.it, 0000-0002-8112-5627

FUP Best Practice in Scholarly Publishing (DOI 10.36253/fup\_best\_practice)

Marco D'Addario, Massimo Labra, Silvia Mari, Raffaele Matacena, Mariangela Zenga, *An analysis of the transaction towards sustainable food consumption practises during the Italian lockdown for SARS-CoV-2: the experience of the Lombardy region*, pp. 121-126, © 2021 Author(s), CC BY 4.0 International, DOI 10.36253/978-88-5518-304-8.24, in Bruno Bertaccini, Luigi Fabbris, Alessandra Petrucci, *ASA 2021 Statistics and Information Systems for Policy Evaluation. Book of short papers of the opening conference*, © 2021 Author(s), content CC BY 4.0 International, metadata CC0 1.0 Universal, published by Firenze University Press (www.fupress.com), ISSN 2704-5846 (online), ISBN 978-88-5518-304-8 (PDF), DOI 10.36253/978-88-5518-304-8


and 7.6% of the sample were employed in essential sectors. Most respondents (39.2%) lived as a couple, 18.9% of cases consisted of three people, and 24.5% of cases comprised four or more people. The individuals who lived the period alone were 15.5%.

Table 1: The sample (n=1540)

## 3. The transition towards sustainable foods consumption practises

With the aim to analyze the transition towards sustainable foods consumption practises, we considered the multiple choice (single answer) item: "In comparison to your 'ordinary' life habits, how often have you consumed the following dishes and foods during the lockdown? Answer: Never as before, less frequently, as usual, more frequently". For the purpose of this paper, the four categories on food consumption were collapsed in 3 categories as follow: Less than before; Never or equal than before; More than before. Now, the second category is thought to underline behaviors that have not changed since before the lockdown. Table 2 reports the consumption's food habits during the first Italian lockdown. A closer look at the results reveals how certain food groups have been favored over others in the timeframe investigated. Among these, sweets and desserts, vegetables, carb dishes and fresh fruit recorded the highest percentages of consumption increase, since they were eaten more frequently than usual by, respectively, 43.3%, 35.8%, 27.5% and 26.5% of the sample. Other foods that were privileged by lockdown eaters belong to the categories of legumes (21.1%) and dairy (20.8%). Interestingly, meat does not seem to have played a leading role within lockdown diets. Despite the overarching tendency pointing towards increased variety and quantity of food consumption, the proportion of respondents who in fact reduced the consumption frequency of meat-based dishes (15.9%) is slightly higher than that of those who consumed meat more frequently (12.3%). A trend of reduction is also highlighted in the cases of sugary beverages (sodas and juices) and alcoholic drinks, most likely linked to the supervened impossibility to experience social gatherings and/or celebration moments. Nevertheless, it is important to notice that 19.1% of the sample - a significant proportion - increased their alcohol consumption while under lockdown. In sum, the lockdown seems to have had a double effect on diets: on the one hand, it spurred the consumption of ingredients that are typical of the Mediterranean diet (vegetables, legumes, fruit) and also deeply associated with traditional patterns of cooking and eating in Italy; on the other, it underscored the 'comforting' effect of certain foods, which brought many people to indulge, in our case, on pasta, sweets and dairy, perhaps as an attempt to cope with boredom and/or other negative subjective consequences of social confinement.


Table 2: The consumer's food habits during the first Italian lockdown.

Since the nature of the scale of the previous items, we applied the categorical principal component analysis (CatPCA, Linting & van der Kooij (2012)) to examine the component structure of the latent construct. Following the EATLancet Commission's dietary recommendations (Willet et al. (2019)), we considered two groups of foods: the sustainable and healthy foods (vegetables-based dishes, legumes, whole-grain cereals, nuts and oily seed and fresh fruit) and, on the contrary, unsustainable and unhealty foods (carb-based dishes, meat-based dishes, dairy products, sweet and desserts, alchoolic beverage, sugary beverage). This choice was confirmed by the application of a preliminary CatPCA on the eleven items. The application of the Cat-PCA separately on the two groups allowed us to obtain an index of transition for the sustainable foods' consumption (TSF) and an index of transition for the unsustainable foods' consumption (TUF).

# 4. The transition for the sustainable foods' consumption

We performed a CatPCA with the five items of the sustainable foods' consumption. According to the "eigenvalue greater than one" criterion only the first component was retained (first eigenvalue equal to 1.895).


Table 3: Component loadings for the CatPCA of transition for sustainable consumer's foods.

The related Cronbach's alpha was 0.555. Table 3 reports the factor loadings of the five foods: it is clear that the first component is highly influenced by the increase in the consumption of legumes, whole-grain cereals and vegetables-based dishes. This new latent construct is interpretable as the transition towards sustainable food consumption practises (TSF): the more the value is positive the more a person realized a transition to sustainable foods' consumption. In analysing the transition towards sustainable foods' consumption practises, a linear regression model was fitted. We obtained the model reported in Table 4, where R<sup>2</sup> equals 8.3% (adjusted R<sup>2</sup> = 7.4%).


Table 4: Parameters estimates, standard errors (se) and p-values of the predictors for the linear regression model with the dependent variable being the TSF.

The TSF index resulted to be affected (statistically significant at 90%) by: age, BMI and food diet. In particular:


# 5. The transition for the unsustainable foods' consumption

The results of the CatPCA on the six items of the unsustainable foods' consumption showed that only the first component had a eigenvalue greater than one (eigenvalue equal to 1.888). The related Cronbach's alpha was 0.564. Table 5 reports the factor loadings of the six foods: the first component is highly influenced by the increase in the consumption of carb-based dishes, sweets and desserts. This new latent construct is interpretable as the transition towards unsustainable foods' consumption practises (TUF): the more the value is positive the more a person realized a transition to unsustainable foods' consumption. We fitted a linear regression model on TUF and we obtained the model reported in Table 6, where R<sup>2</sup> equals 13.5% (adjusted R<sup>2</sup> = 12.5%).


Table 5: Component loadings for the CatPCA of transition for unsustainable consumer's foods.


Table 6: Parameters estimates, standard errors (se) and p-values of the predictors for the linear regression model with the dependent variable being the TUF index.

The TUF index resulted to be affected (statistically significant at 90%) by: gender, age, food diet and economic well-being. In particular:


# 6. Conclusion

The outbreak of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic caused major perturbations to the food environment in many localities of the world, further exacerbated by the introduction of social isolation and business shutdown measures intended to slow down the transmission of the virus.

This research investigated the profiles of sustainability of the transformations that occurred in the daily nutritional choices and behaviors of Italian households during the March-May 2020 general lockdown. Home confinement affected the food behaviors of our respondents and the health crisis seemed to be an occasion for a large section of interviewees to rethink food and nutrition.

During lockdown weeks, food was appreciated in its raw, fresh, seasonal, local-bound and unprocessed form, (re-)gaining relevance not only as a pleasurable hobby (cooking as a leisure activity) but also as a cornerstone of pro-health behaviors and shared social practices. This led to an improvement of the healthiness and sustainability of diets which we measured and compared through the elaboration of the transition for the sustainable foods' consumption index and the transition for the unsustainable foods' consumption index.

The evidence gathered by this research suggests that the trajectories towards such a transition are already plotted, but it will take an adequate support from cultural, political and economic institutions to create the conditions for sustainable food production and consumption to take hold as the 'new' normal in the post-pandemic era.

## References

