Healthy Environments Research Programme, Department of Geography, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK.
Int J Epidemiol. 2010 Feb;39(1):277-84. doi: 10.1093/ije/dyp221. Epub 2009 Jun 2.
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.
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.
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.
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.
“剥夺放大”假说认为,贫困社区的居民普遍难以获得高质量的食品环境,这反过来又导致了饮食和与饮食相关的慢性疾病在空间上的不平等。本文介绍了一项研究的结果,该研究量化了苏格兰四个环境背景(岛屿、农村、小镇和城市)中 205 个社区内 457 家销售新鲜水果和蔬菜的杂货店的可达性。
使用地理信息系统(GIS)计算了位于苏格兰四个环境背景(岛屿、农村、小镇和城市)的 205 个社区内 457 家杂货店的网络出行时间的可达性。调查了这四个环境背景下每个社区的可达性分布与贫困程度之间的关系。
总体而言,最贫困的社区拥有最好的杂货店和销售新鲜农产品的杂货店可达性。按环境背景分层分析表明,与最贫困的城市社区相比,最不贫困的城市社区比岛屿、农村和小镇地区的对应社区具有更好的杂货店可达性。与贫困程度较低的城市和小镇社区相比,较贫困的社区更能获得新鲜农产品,但在最富裕的岛屿社区中情况最差,农村地区的结果则好坏参半。
本文的结果表明,在研究社区食品环境时,普遍存在的“剥夺放大”假设可能存在误导。社区贫困程度与杂货店可达性之间的关联因环境背景而异。理解和纠正不良饮食分布的空间不平等的理论和政策需要具有针对性。