Pearce Jamie, Hiscock Rosemary, Blakely Tony, Witten Karen
GeoHealth Laboratory, Department of Geography, University of Canterbury, Private Bag 4800, Christchurch 8020, New Zealand.
Health Place. 2009 Mar;15(1):193-7. doi: 10.1016/j.healthplace.2008.04.003. Epub 2008 Apr 10.
Differential locational access to fast-food retailing between neighbourhoods of varying socioeconomic status has been suggested as a contextual explanation for the social distribution of diet-related mortality and morbidity. This New Zealand study examines whether neighbourhood access to fast-food outlets is associated with individual diet-related health outcomes. Travel distances to the closest fast-food outlet (multinational and locally operated) were calculated for all neighbourhoods and appended to a national health survey. Residents in neighbourhoods with the furthest access to a multinational fast-food outlet were more likely to eat the recommended intake of vegetables but also be overweight. There was no association with fruit consumption. Access to locally operated fast-food outlets was not associated with the consumption of the recommended fruit and vegetables or being overweight. Better neighbourhood access to fast-food retailing is unlikely to be a key contextual driver for inequalities in diet-related health outcomes in New Zealand.
不同社会经济地位社区在获得快餐零售方面的区位差异,被认为是与饮食相关的死亡率和发病率社会分布的一种背景解释。这项新西兰研究调查了社区获得快餐店的机会是否与个人饮食相关的健康结果有关。计算了所有社区到最近的快餐店(跨国经营和本地经营)的出行距离,并将其附加到一项全国健康调查中。到跨国快餐店距离最远的社区居民更有可能摄入推荐量的蔬菜,但也更有可能超重。这与水果消费没有关联。获得本地经营的快餐店的机会与推荐的水果和蔬菜消费或超重无关。在新西兰,社区更好地获得快餐零售不太可能是与饮食相关的健康结果不平等的关键背景驱动因素。