Powell Lisa M, Chaloupka Frank J, Bao Yanjun
Department of Economics, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60305, USA.
Am J Prev Med. 2007 Oct;33(4 Suppl):S240-5. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2007.07.005.
Parallel to the rising obesity epidemic, food consumption patterns and household expenditures show a marked upward trend in total energy intake derived from away-from-home sources.
This study conducted cross-sectional multivariate analyses to examine associations between local-area racial, ethnic, and income characteristics and the availability of full-service and fast-food restaurants. Based on a U.S. national census of 28,050 ZIP codes that cover a population of 280,675,874 people, restaurant outlet data were linked to 2000 Census Bureau data based on ZIP code tabulation areas and analyses were undertaken using negative binomial count models and ordinary least squares regression analyses.
Study results showed that higher- versus lower-income, predominantly black and racially mixed versus predominantly white and Hispanic versus non-Hispanic neighborhoods had fewer available full-service and fast-food restaurants. Near-low- and middle-income neighborhoods had the highest number of available restaurants with 1.24 and 1.22 times number of full-service restaurants and 1.34 and 1.28 times the number of fast-food restaurants compared to high-income neighborhoods. Predominantly black neighborhoods were found to have 58.2% and 59.3% of the number of full-service and fast-food restaurants available in predominantly white neighborhoods. No statistically significant differences were found in the relative availability of fast-food versus full-service restaurants by income, race, or ethnicity in the national sample used. However, across urban areas, near-low-, middle-, and near-high- versus high-income neighborhoods and predominantly black versus white neighborhoods were found to have moderately higher proportions of fast-food among total restaurants.
In urban areas, higher proportions of available fast-food restaurants out of total restaurants in predominantly black versus predominantly white neighborhoods may contribute to racial differences in obesity rates.
与肥胖症流行加剧同时出现的是,外出就餐的食物消费模式和家庭支出显示,来自外出就餐的总能量摄入量呈显著上升趋势。
本研究进行了横断面多变量分析,以检验当地种族、民族和收入特征与全套服务餐厅和快餐店的可及性之间的关联。基于对覆盖2.80675874亿人口的28050个邮政编码区域的美国全国人口普查,餐厅网点数据与基于邮政编码制表区域的2000年人口普查局数据相关联,并使用负二项式计数模型和普通最小二乘法回归分析进行分析。
研究结果表明,与低收入地区相比,高收入地区、主要为黑人及种族混合社区与主要为白人、西班牙裔与非西班牙裔社区相比,全套服务餐厅和快餐店的可及数量较少。与高收入社区相比,接近低收入和中等收入的社区拥有的餐厅数量最多,全套服务餐厅数量分别是其1.24倍和1.22倍,快餐店数量分别是其1.34倍和1.28倍。发现主要为黑人的社区拥有的全套服务餐厅和快餐店数量分别是主要为白人社区的58.2%和59.3%。在所用的全国样本中,按收入、种族或民族划分,快餐店与全套服务餐厅的相对可及性没有发现统计学上的显著差异。然而,在城市地区,接近低收入、中等收入、接近高收入与高收入社区以及主要为黑人与白人社区相比,快餐店在餐厅总数中所占比例略高。
在城市地区,主要为黑人的社区与主要为白人的社区相比,快餐店在餐厅总数中所占比例较高,这可能导致肥胖率的种族差异。