Grocery shopping as an outcome measure: A scoping review
Keith R. Cole, Sophie Minick, Leslie F. Davidson, Rae Yule Kim, Rae Yule Kim, Rae Yule Kim

TL;DR
This review explores how grocery shopping is used to measure functional abilities, highlighting gaps in combining cognitive and physical assessments.
Contribution
The study identifies gaps in integrating cognitive and physical domains in grocery shopping outcome measures.
Findings
Fifty-eight studies from 15 countries were analyzed for grocery shopping as a functional outcome measure.
Most studies focused on cognitive functioning or physical impairments, with few examining combined domains.
Only three studies used naturalistic, free-living grocery shopping methods.
Abstract
Grocery shopping is a complex Instrumental Activity of Daily Living (IADL) requiring cognitive and physical components that can be used to assess functional performance. Real-world physical and cognitive demands of grocery shopping occur simultaneously; however, many existing outcome measures only include a single domain or subtask. The objective of this review is to examine how grocery shopping as a whole, or multiple simultaneous subtasks of grocery shopping, has been used as a functional outcomes measure. Peer-reviewed manuscripts in the English language were retrieved from PubMed, Medline, Scopus, and Cochrane published on or before December 20, 2024. Articles were included if an outcome measure included multiple subtasks of grocery shopping and excluded if an outcome was related to only a single subtask of grocery shopping. Extracted data included Author(s), Publication Title,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth disparities and outcomes · Older Adults Driving Studies · Dementia and Cognitive Impairment Research
