Plataforma de Acciones en Alimentación Urbana

Culturing Food Deserts: Recognizing the Power of Community-Based Solutions

Autor: Brinkley, Catherine; Raj, Subhashni; Horst, Megan
Publicado por: Alexandrine Press
2017

Food deserts, places where residents lack nearby supermarkets, have received attention from the media, academics, policy-makers, and activists. The popular policy response is to establish a new supermarket. Yet, communities who live in food deserts may already have their own well-adapted strategies to access healthy food. In this article, we argue that policy-makers all too often overlook in situ opportunities, and may even disrupt low-cost healthy food access options with supermarket interventions. We use evidence to make two main points. First, we demonstrate the limitations of focusing on food deserts when interpreting diet-related health disparities. By conducting a US national county-level multi-variable spatial regression analysis of socio-economic status, built environment and food environment factors, we determine that diet-related health outcomes do not clearly correlate with supermarket access. Instead, health outcomes are most strongly associated with income and race. This suggests that interventions to improve healthy eating should begin with a focus on anti-poverty. Second, we identify alternative paths, beyond supermarkets, to healthy food access through a literature review.


Tema: Social and economic equity
Etiqueta: Data innovation, Food banks, Food security and nutrition, Short chain
Organización: Alexandrine Press
Autor: Brinkley, Catherine; Raj, Subhashni; Horst, Megan
Año: 2017
Tipo: Academic Literature
Región: Global coverage
Formato de recurso: Document
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