‘Healthcare is complicated’: Kroger’s complex journey to link food with health

‘Healthcare is complicated’: Kroger’s complex journey to link food with health

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In recent years, Kroger’s health and wellness division, Kroger Health, has carved out a reputation in the grocery industry as a leader in nutrition, health and wellness efforts. 

Building off Kroger’s supermarket business, Kroger Health aims to provide customers with a range of health and wellness services and tools, from proprietary nutritional food product ratings to pharmacy services and in-store clinics.

The company has positioned its efforts as a win both for customers navigating a complex healthcare industry and for its bottom line.

“We know that grocery customers who are also pharmacy customers are more loyal to Kroger and spend more with us,” Kroger CEO and Chairman Rodney McMullen recently told investors. “While the pharmacy industry is going through a period of transformation and disruption, we have a unique opportunity to help our customers live healthier lives and grow share.” 

Kroger is also forging a focus on healthcare in the grocery industry as other companies in the space, from Instacart to regional chain Heinen’s, ramp up their personalized health and wellness efforts for grocery consumers. 

But the intersection of groceries and health is a tricky place to operate. Kroger Health straddles an inherent tension between its focus on wellness and health and being part of a company that’s in the business of selling groceries, from organic apples to sugary yogurts.

In addition, Kroger Health faces challenges ranging from regulatory hurdles to technology woes as it pushes forward with its strategy, according to interviews with several Kroger Health executives.  

Closeup a person holding a phone.

Kroger’s OptUp gives customers a nutritional product rating and provides recommendations for better-scoring items.

Catherine Douglas Moran/Grocery Dive

 

One piece of that strategy is OptUp, a tool in Kroger’s app that allows people to scan product barcodes and see a proprietary nutrition rating for the item along with recommendations for items with better ratings. OptUp also provides an overall purchasing score, which Kroger calls the “basket score,” allowing each user to see insights on how the nutrition of their purchases compares over different periods of time. 

The tool aims to simplify grocery shopping by giving customers a convenient way to digest a nutrition label and understand it holistically, said Laura Brown, Kroger Health’s director of nutrition, noting that the algorithm is trained “to think statistically like a registered dietitian.” 

During a tour of a Kroger store near the company’s Cincinnati headquarters, Brown scanned a product barcode to demonstrate how consumers can gain nutritional information by using OptUp: “It’s in the orange range, which means it’s super great for you. Forty percent of your cart should be orange. But could you improve it and get into the green area? You can do that by just choosing the apples with peanut butter.” 

The basket score allows Kroger to get a snapshot of healthy purchasing behaviors by store, allowing them to identify populations that might need help improving their health outcomes, executives noted.

During the in-store demo, though, some of the scanned products had incorrect or incomplete OptUp scores — underscoring how some of Kroger Health’s initiatives are still a work in progress. Since launching OptUp in 2018, Kroger has worked to add more products to its proprietary nutritional rating system and also transferred the tool from a standalone service into its grocery shopping app. 

Consumers can be confused and frustrated when it comes to navigating healthcare and making healthier choices, Meggen Brown, chief nursing officer of Kroger Health and The Little Clinic, said in a recent interview at Kroger Health’s headquarters. 

“Healthcare is complicated,” Meggen Brown said.

Going beyond groceries

Kroger Health formed in 2017 when the grocery company brought together its clinic and pharmacy businesses and dietitians to work collaboratively across the entire company. 

Along with its corporate staff and chief medical officer, the division has grown to span pharmacists, pharmacy technicians, nurse practitioners, dietitians, physician assistants and licensed practical nurses. Kroger Health now provides a variety of healthcare services, from in-store clinics to pharmacy services to OptUp and other nutrition tools. 

“We used to be ‘the sniffles clinic.’ The pharmacy — they used to just dispense medication,” Meggen Brown said.

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