Assistant Professor, Division of Public Health/Department of Family Medicine, Michigan State University, United States.
Assistant Professor, Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Drexel University, United States.
Spat Spatiotemporal Epidemiol. 2021 Feb;36:100387. doi: 10.1016/j.sste.2020.100387. Epub 2020 Nov 5.
Food access literature links disinvested communities with poor food access. Similarly, links are made between discriminatory housing practices and contemporary investment. Less work has examined the relationship between housing practices and food environment disparities. Our central premise is that these practices create distinctions in food environment quality, and that these disparities may have implications for food system advocacy and policymaking. In this paper, we link an objective food environment assessment with a spatial database highlighting redlining, blockbusting, and gentrification in Baltimore, Maryland, USA. Standard socioeconomic and housing characteristics are used to control for race, income, and housing composition in a multivariate regression analysis. Our findings highlight that blockbusting-rather than redlining-most strongly shapes poor food access. Redlining and gentrification, meanwhile, are associated with better food access. These findings raise important points about future policy discussions, which should instead be focused on ameliorating more contemporary patterns of housing inequality.
食品获取文献将投资不足的社区与食品获取机会匮乏联系起来。同样,住房歧视性做法与当代投资之间也存在联系。但很少有研究考察住房做法与食品环境差异之间的关系。我们的主要前提是,这些做法造成了食品环境质量的差异,而这些差异可能对食品系统的倡导和决策制定产生影响。在本文中,我们将客观的食品环境评估与突显美国马里兰州巴尔的摩市红线划定、街区爆破和 gentrification 的空间数据库联系起来。在多元回归分析中,我们使用标准的社会经济和住房特征来控制种族、收入和住房构成。我们的研究结果表明,街区爆破而不是红线划定对贫困人群获得食品的机会影响最大。同时,红线划定和 gentrification 与更好的食品获取机会有关。这些发现提出了关于未来政策讨论的重要观点,政策讨论应该侧重于改善更当代的住房不平等模式。