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Seeing the food swamp for the weeds: Moving beyond food retail mix in evaluating young people's food environments

Nutritional health of children and youth is an increasing cause for concern in Canada. Through food and beverage messaging in multiple environments, young people develop eating behaviours with ramifications throughout their life course. Unhealthy food retailers near schools, recreation facilities, a...

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Autores principales: Brown, Jennifer Ann, Ferdinands, Alexa R., Prowse, Rachel, Reynard, Darcy, Raine, Kim D., Nykiforuk, Candace I.J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8142271/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34041350
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ssmph.2021.100803
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author Brown, Jennifer Ann
Ferdinands, Alexa R.
Prowse, Rachel
Reynard, Darcy
Raine, Kim D.
Nykiforuk, Candace I.J.
author_facet Brown, Jennifer Ann
Ferdinands, Alexa R.
Prowse, Rachel
Reynard, Darcy
Raine, Kim D.
Nykiforuk, Candace I.J.
author_sort Brown, Jennifer Ann
collection PubMed
description Nutritional health of children and youth is an increasing cause for concern in Canada. Through food and beverage messaging in multiple environments, young people develop eating behaviours with ramifications throughout their life course. Unhealthy food retailers near schools, recreation facilities, and childcare centres—key activity settings for healthy eating promotion—present repeated, compounding exposures to commercial geomarketing. Geomarketing impacts nutritional health by promoting highly processed, calorie-dense, and nutrient-poor foods and beverages across urban landscapes. While food retail mix (as a ratio of healthy to unhealthy food retailers) can be used to assess food environments at multiple scales, such measures may misrepresent young people's unique experience of these geographic phenomena. Moving beyond uniform conceptualization of food environments, new research methods and tools are needed for children and youth. We investigated young people's food environments in the major Canadian cities of Calgary and Edmonton. Using government-initiated nutrition guidelines, we categorized 55.8% of all food retailers in Calgary, and 59.9% in Edmonton as ‘unhealthy’. A Bernoulli trial at the 0.05 alpha level indicated few differences in prevalence proximal to activity settings versus elsewhere in both cities, demonstrating the limited applicability of food retail mix for characterizing young people's food environments. To model unhealthy food retailers geomarketing to children and youth, we considered their proximity to multiple activity settings, using overlapping radial buffers at the 250 m, 500 m, 1000 m, and 1500 m scales. Examining young people's food environments relative to the spaces where they learn and play, we determined that as many as 895 out of 2663 unhealthy food retailers fell within 1500 m of 21+ activity settings. By conceptualizing, measuring, and problematizing these “super-proximal” unhealthy food retailers, urban planners and public health researchers can use these techniques to pinpoint unhealthy food retailers, or “weeds in the food swamp,” as a critical site for healthy eating promotion in municipalities.
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spelling pubmed-81422712021-05-25 Seeing the food swamp for the weeds: Moving beyond food retail mix in evaluating young people's food environments Brown, Jennifer Ann Ferdinands, Alexa R. Prowse, Rachel Reynard, Darcy Raine, Kim D. Nykiforuk, Candace I.J. SSM Popul Health Article Nutritional health of children and youth is an increasing cause for concern in Canada. Through food and beverage messaging in multiple environments, young people develop eating behaviours with ramifications throughout their life course. Unhealthy food retailers near schools, recreation facilities, and childcare centres—key activity settings for healthy eating promotion—present repeated, compounding exposures to commercial geomarketing. Geomarketing impacts nutritional health by promoting highly processed, calorie-dense, and nutrient-poor foods and beverages across urban landscapes. While food retail mix (as a ratio of healthy to unhealthy food retailers) can be used to assess food environments at multiple scales, such measures may misrepresent young people's unique experience of these geographic phenomena. Moving beyond uniform conceptualization of food environments, new research methods and tools are needed for children and youth. We investigated young people's food environments in the major Canadian cities of Calgary and Edmonton. Using government-initiated nutrition guidelines, we categorized 55.8% of all food retailers in Calgary, and 59.9% in Edmonton as ‘unhealthy’. A Bernoulli trial at the 0.05 alpha level indicated few differences in prevalence proximal to activity settings versus elsewhere in both cities, demonstrating the limited applicability of food retail mix for characterizing young people's food environments. To model unhealthy food retailers geomarketing to children and youth, we considered their proximity to multiple activity settings, using overlapping radial buffers at the 250 m, 500 m, 1000 m, and 1500 m scales. Examining young people's food environments relative to the spaces where they learn and play, we determined that as many as 895 out of 2663 unhealthy food retailers fell within 1500 m of 21+ activity settings. By conceptualizing, measuring, and problematizing these “super-proximal” unhealthy food retailers, urban planners and public health researchers can use these techniques to pinpoint unhealthy food retailers, or “weeds in the food swamp,” as a critical site for healthy eating promotion in municipalities. Elsevier 2021-04-26 /pmc/articles/PMC8142271/ /pubmed/34041350 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ssmph.2021.100803 Text en © 2021 Published by Elsevier Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Brown, Jennifer Ann
Ferdinands, Alexa R.
Prowse, Rachel
Reynard, Darcy
Raine, Kim D.
Nykiforuk, Candace I.J.
Seeing the food swamp for the weeds: Moving beyond food retail mix in evaluating young people's food environments
title Seeing the food swamp for the weeds: Moving beyond food retail mix in evaluating young people's food environments
title_full Seeing the food swamp for the weeds: Moving beyond food retail mix in evaluating young people's food environments
title_fullStr Seeing the food swamp for the weeds: Moving beyond food retail mix in evaluating young people's food environments
title_full_unstemmed Seeing the food swamp for the weeds: Moving beyond food retail mix in evaluating young people's food environments
title_short Seeing the food swamp for the weeds: Moving beyond food retail mix in evaluating young people's food environments
title_sort seeing the food swamp for the weeds: moving beyond food retail mix in evaluating young people's food environments
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8142271/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34041350
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ssmph.2021.100803
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