Department of Community Health Sciences, Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, New Orleans, Louisiana 70112, USA.
Prev Med. 2010 Jul;51(1):63-7. doi: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2010.04.009. Epub 2010 Apr 18.
Recent work demonstrates the importance of in-store contents, yet most food access disparity research has focused on differences in store access, rather than the foods they carry. This study examined in-store shelf space of key foods to test whether other types of stores might offset the relative lack of supermarkets in African-American neighborhoods.
New Orleans census tract data were combined with health department information on food stores open in 2004-2005. Shelf space of fruits, vegetables, and energy-dense snacks was assessed using a measuring wheel and established protocols in a sample of stores. Neighborhood availability of foods was calculated by summing shelf space in all stores within 2km of tract centers. Regression analyses assessed associations between tract racial composition and aggregate food availability.
African-American neighborhoods had fewer supermarkets and the aggregate availability of fresh fruits and vegetables was lower than in other neighborhoods. There were no differences in snack food availability.
Other store types did not offset the relative lack of supermarkets in African-American neighborhoods in the provision of fresh produce, though they did for snack foods. Altering the mix of foods offered in such stores might mitigate these inequities.
最近的研究表明店内商品种类的重要性,但大多数有关食品可及性差异的研究都集中在商店分布的差异上,而不是它们所销售的食品种类。本研究通过检测店内货架空间来检验其他类型的商店是否可以弥补非裔美国人社区相对缺乏超市的问题。
将新奥尔良普查区数据与 2004-2005 年开放的卫生部门食品商店信息相结合。在样本商店中使用测量轮和既定方案评估水果、蔬菜和高能量零食的货架空间。通过计算中心地带 2 公里范围内所有商店的货架空间总和,来计算食品在各街区的供应情况。回归分析评估了街区种族构成与总体食品供应之间的关系。
非裔美国人社区的超市数量较少,新鲜水果和蔬菜的总供应量也低于其他街区。零食的供应情况没有差异。
在为非裔美国人社区提供新鲜农产品方面,其他类型的商店并没有弥补超市相对不足的问题,尽管它们在提供零食方面没有差异。改变这些商店提供的食品种类可能会缓解这些不平等现象。