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Archivos Latinoamericanos de Nutrición
versión impresa ISSN 0004-0622versión On-line ISSN 2309-5806
Resumen
PAVA-CARDENAS, Alexandra; LOPEZ-RAMIREZ, Patricia; RUEDA-GOMEZ, Alba Lucía y REYES-GAVILAN, Pablo Alexander. Crossroads about what to sell?: vending machines in university food environments. Arch Latinoam Nutr [online]. 2023, vol.73, suppl.2, pp.140-150. Epub 11-Oct-2024. ISSN 0004-0622. https://doi.org/10.37527/2023.73.s2.016.
Introduction:
Food and beverage vending machines (MEBA) are gaining presence in universities, which promotes weight gain in young adults.
Objective:
to recognize the configuration of the MEBA for the construction of a healthy food environment in a university in Colombia.
Materials and methods:
multimodal descriptive design, with an empirical approach of: interview with decision makers of the educational institution (n=6); analysis of sales during one year (n=12,955) in the MEBAs (n=12); characterization by nutritional density of the offer (n=152) and tracking of circulating communications associated with food. The analysis considered four moments: I-Relationships; II-MEBA Channel; III-Nutrition and IV-Interaction. I and II focused on the political, sociocultural, physical and economic components. The III studied the nutritional contribution of drinks and foods to integrate results in the IV.
Results:
the absence of a policy on institutional food such as communicative visibility seems to enhance social conditions that reinforce logics of: “necessary evil”, “already existing consumption profile”, “absence of academic exercises” and “negative experiences with healthy eating”. Foundations to offer with greater demand drinks such as soft drinks and water and, in food, chocolate in different formulations. In the classification by nutritional density, it was found that the drinks were classified as “unhealthy” (51.6%); “something healthy” (28.1%) and “healthy” (20.3%). “Somewhat healthy” foods (44.9%); “unhealthy” (32.2%) and “healthy” (22.9%).
Conclusions:
the university, a training space, requires efforts at sociocultural understanding, management aligned with health promotion regulations to influence the nutritional quality offered to the university community.
Palabras clave : collective eating; healthy eating; health promotion; built environment; higher education..












