1Division of General Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine,Department of Pediatrics,School of Medicine,University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,231 MacNider,CB#7225,Chapel Hill,NC 27599-7225,USA.
2Brody School of Medicine,East Carolina University,Greenville,NC,USA.
Public Health Nutr. 2018 Oct;21(15):2866-2874. doi: 10.1017/S1368980018001751. Epub 2018 Jul 11.
To examine perspectives on food access among low-income families participating in a cost-offset community-supported agriculture (CO-CSA) programme.
Farm Fresh Foods for Healthy Kids (F3HK) is a multicentre randomized intervention trial assessing the effect of CO-CSA on dietary intake and quality among children from low-income families. Focus groups were conducted at the end of the first CO-CSA season. Participants were interviewed about programme experiences, framed by five dimensions of food access: availability, accessibility, affordability, acceptability and accommodation. Transcribed data were coded on these dimensions plus emergent themes.
Nine communities in the US states of New York, North Carolina, Washington and Vermont.
Fifty-three F3HK adults with children.
CSA models were structured by partner farms. Produce quantity was abundant; however, availability was enhanced for participants who were able to select their own produce items. Flexible CSA pick-up times and locations made produce pick-up more accessible. Despite being affordable to most, payment timing was a barrier for some. Unfamiliar foods and quick spoilage hindered acceptability through challenging meal planning, despite accommodations that included preparation advice.
Although CO-CSA may facilitate increased access to fruits and vegetables for low-income families, perceptions of positive diet change may be limited by the ability to incorporate share pick-up into regular travel patterns and meal planning. Food waste concerns may be particularly acute for families with constrained resources. Future research should examine whether CO-CSA with flexible logistics and produce self-selection are sustainable for low-income families and CSA farms.
探讨参与成本补偿社区支持型农业(CO-CSA)计划的低收入家庭对食品获取的看法。
Farm Fresh Foods for Healthy Kids(F3HK)是一项多中心随机干预试验,评估 CO-CSA 对来自低收入家庭的儿童饮食摄入和质量的影响。在第一个 CO-CSA 季节结束时进行了焦点小组讨论。参与者根据食品获取的五个维度(可得性、可及性、可负担性、可接受性和适应性),就项目经验接受了采访。转录数据按照这些维度和新出现的主题进行编码。
美国纽约州、北卡罗来纳州、华盛顿州和佛蒙特州的九个社区。
F3HK 中有 53 名成年人和儿童。
CSA 模式由合作农场构建。农产品数量丰富;然而,对于能够选择自己农产品的参与者来说,可得性得到了提高。灵活的 CSA 取货时间和地点使取货更加便利。尽管对大多数人来说是负担得起的,但对一些人来说,付款时间是一个障碍。一些人认为不熟悉的食物和快速变质会阻碍接受,因为这会给他们的膳食计划带来挑战,尽管他们会得到一些准备建议。
尽管 CO-CSA 可能会增加低收入家庭获得水果和蔬菜的机会,但对积极改变饮食的看法可能会受到将份额取货纳入日常旅行模式和膳食计划的能力的限制。对于资源有限的家庭来说,食物浪费问题可能尤为严重。未来的研究应该研究具有灵活物流和农产品自选功能的 CO-CSA 是否适合低收入家庭和 CSA 农场。