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Healthy Food Availability Could Depend On Where You Live, As Does The Quality Of Your Diet
The
availability of healthy food choices and your quality of diet is
associated with where you live, according to two studies conducted by
researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Researchers examined healthy food availability and diet quality among
Baltimore City and Baltimore County, Md., residents and found that
availability of healthy foods was associated with quality of diet and
46 percent of lower-income neighborhoods had a low availability of
healthy foods.
The results are published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition and the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.
"Place
of residence plays a larger role in dietary health than previously
estimated," said Manuel Franco, MD, PhD, lead author of the studies and
an associate with the Bloomberg School’s Department of
Epidemiology. "Our findings show that participants who live in
neighborhoods with low healthy food availability are at an increased
risk of consuming a lower quality diet. We also found that 24 percent
of the black participants lived in neighborhoods with a low
availability of healthy food compared with 5 percent of white
participants."
Researchers
conducted a cross-sectional study to examine the association between
the availability of healthy foods and diet quality among 759
participants of a population-based cardiovascular cohort study, the
Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA). Using a food frequency
questionnaire, Franco, along with colleagues from the Johns Hopkins
School of Medicine, the University of Michigan and the University of
Texas, summarized diet into twodietary patterns reflecting low and high
quality diet. The availability of healthy foods was assessed by
examining food stores within MESA participants’ neighborhood or
census tract, their closest food store and all food stores within one
mile of the participants’ residence. Availability of healthy
foods in each food store was assessed by measuring the availability of
items like fresh fruits and vegetables, skim milk and whole wheat bread
as recommended by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Their findings
were reported in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
In the
American Journal of Preventive Medicine, Franco, along with colleagues
from the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and the University of
Michigan, examined the differences in the availability of healthy foods
across 159 neighborhoods and 226 neighborhood stores in Baltimore City
and Baltimore County. Researchers found that 43 percent of
predominantly black neighborhoods and 46 percent of lower-income
neighborhoods fell under the category of low availability of healthy
foods versus 4 percent and 13 percent, respectively, in predominantly
white and higher-income neighborhoods. In addition, supermarkets in
predominantly white and higher-income neighborhoods had higher levels
of healthy food availability compared to supermarkets located in
lower-income neighborhoods and predominantly black neighborhoods.
"Previous
studies have suggested that race and income are related to healthy food
intake and our choice of foods play a major role in our health and
diet," said Benjamin Caballero, MD, PhD, professor at the Bloomberg
School’s Department of International Health. "Our studies show
that where you live is a major determinant of your health. The joint
efforts of public health researchers in collaboration with community
groups and policymakers will be required to effectively change the
current picture of the less-than-optimal availability of recommended
healthy foods."
The research was funded by the Center for a Livable Future at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public health.
For mroe information on the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, visit http://www.jhsph.edu/.
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