Neighbourhood food environment and area deprivation: spatial accessibility to grocery stores selling fresh fruit and vegetables in urban and rural settings
Neighbourhood food environment and area deprivation: spatial accessibility to grocery stores selling fresh fruit and vegetables in urban and rural settings
BACKGROUND:
The 'deprivation amplification' hypothesis suggests that residents of deprived neighbourhoods have universally poorer access to high-quality food environments, which in turn contributes to the development of spatial inequalities in diet and diet-related chronic disease. This paper presents results from a study that quantified access to grocery stores selling fresh fruit and vegetables in four environmental settings in Scotland, UK.
METHODS:
Spatial accessibility, as measured by network travel times, to 457 grocery stores located in 205 neighbourhoods in four environmental settings (island, rural, small town and urban) in Scotland was calculated using Geographical Information Systems. The distribution of accessibility by neighbourhood deprivation in each of these four settings was investigated.
RESULTS:
Overall, the most deprived neighbourhoods had the best access to grocery stores and grocery stores selling fresh produce. Stratified analysis by environmental setting suggests that the least deprived compared with the most deprived urban neighbourhoods have greater accessibility to grocery stores than their counterparts in island, rural and small town locations. Access to fresh produce is better in more deprived compared with less deprived urban and small town neighbourhoods, but poorest in the most affluent island communities with mixed results for rural settings.
CONCLUSIONS:
The results presented here suggest that the assumption of a universal 'deprivation amplification' hypothesis in studies of the neighbourhood food environment may be misguided. Associations between neighbourhood deprivation and grocery store accessibility vary by environmental setting. Theories and policies aimed at understanding and rectifying spatial inequalities in the distribution of neighbourhood exposures for poor diet need to be context specific.
neighbourhood, diet, deprivation, access, travel times, environment, inequality, urban, rural
277-284
Smith, D.M.
e859097c-f9f5-4fd0-8b07-59218648e726
Cummins, S.
d4b26eb6-881f-452f-983e-974548b4dd4e
Taylor, M.
bdd7186d-4fda-4a39-bddb-9fcbbe25fcaa
Dawson, J.
b8850362-e1fa-4041-8a34-d6990ecb695d
Marshall, D.
0507f47f-9a53-48fe-8399-8ddc4ee97523
Sparks, L.
c28d1084-6475-4b99-9b85-2559f9e3cf11
Anderson, A.S.
dc723700-b7c4-44fc-abad-ddbd01052151
February 2010
Smith, D.M.
e859097c-f9f5-4fd0-8b07-59218648e726
Cummins, S.
d4b26eb6-881f-452f-983e-974548b4dd4e
Taylor, M.
bdd7186d-4fda-4a39-bddb-9fcbbe25fcaa
Dawson, J.
b8850362-e1fa-4041-8a34-d6990ecb695d
Marshall, D.
0507f47f-9a53-48fe-8399-8ddc4ee97523
Sparks, L.
c28d1084-6475-4b99-9b85-2559f9e3cf11
Anderson, A.S.
dc723700-b7c4-44fc-abad-ddbd01052151
Smith, D.M., Cummins, S., Taylor, M., Dawson, J., Marshall, D., Sparks, L. and Anderson, A.S.
(2010)
Neighbourhood food environment and area deprivation: spatial accessibility to grocery stores selling fresh fruit and vegetables in urban and rural settings.
International Journal of Epidemiology, 39 (1), .
(doi:10.1093/ije/dyp221).
(PMID:19491142)
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
The 'deprivation amplification' hypothesis suggests that residents of deprived neighbourhoods have universally poorer access to high-quality food environments, which in turn contributes to the development of spatial inequalities in diet and diet-related chronic disease. This paper presents results from a study that quantified access to grocery stores selling fresh fruit and vegetables in four environmental settings in Scotland, UK.
METHODS:
Spatial accessibility, as measured by network travel times, to 457 grocery stores located in 205 neighbourhoods in four environmental settings (island, rural, small town and urban) in Scotland was calculated using Geographical Information Systems. The distribution of accessibility by neighbourhood deprivation in each of these four settings was investigated.
RESULTS:
Overall, the most deprived neighbourhoods had the best access to grocery stores and grocery stores selling fresh produce. Stratified analysis by environmental setting suggests that the least deprived compared with the most deprived urban neighbourhoods have greater accessibility to grocery stores than their counterparts in island, rural and small town locations. Access to fresh produce is better in more deprived compared with less deprived urban and small town neighbourhoods, but poorest in the most affluent island communities with mixed results for rural settings.
CONCLUSIONS:
The results presented here suggest that the assumption of a universal 'deprivation amplification' hypothesis in studies of the neighbourhood food environment may be misguided. Associations between neighbourhood deprivation and grocery store accessibility vary by environmental setting. Theories and policies aimed at understanding and rectifying spatial inequalities in the distribution of neighbourhood exposures for poor diet need to be context specific.
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 5 May 2009
e-pub ahead of print date: 2 June 2009
Published date: February 2010
Keywords:
neighbourhood, diet, deprivation, access, travel times, environment, inequality, urban, rural
Organisations:
Population, Health & Wellbeing (PHeW)
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 382513
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/382513
ISSN: 0300-5771
PURE UUID: ca2c8513-76dc-4425-a607-5fe83463470a
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Date deposited: 02 Nov 2015 12:23
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:53
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Contributors
Author:
S. Cummins
Author:
M. Taylor
Author:
J. Dawson
Author:
D. Marshall
Author:
L. Sparks
Author:
A.S. Anderson
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