Department of Marine and Environmental Sciences, Nova Southeastern University, 3301 College Ave, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33314, USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021 Sep 29;18(19):10297. doi: 10.3390/ijerph181910297.
"Food deserts" are usually defined as geographic areas without local access to fresh, healthy food. We used community ecology statistics in supermarkets to quantify the availability of healthy food and to potentially identify food deserts as areas without a diverse selection of food, rather than a binary as to whether fresh food is present or not. We test whether produce diversity is correlated with neighborhood income or demographics. Abundance and diversity of fresh produce was quantified in supermarkets in Broward County, Florida, USA. Neighborhood income level and racial/ethnic makeup were retrieved from the U.S. Census and American Community Survey. Although diversity varied, there were no communities that had consistently less available fresh food, although the percent of a neighborhood identifying as "white" was positively correlated with produce diversity. There may be fewer choices in neighborhoods with a higher proportion of minorities, but there were no consistent patterns of produce diversity in Broward County. This method demonstrates an easy, inexpensive way to characterize food deserts beyond simple distance, and results in precise enough information to identify gaps in the availability of healthy foods.
"食品荒漠"通常被定义为缺乏当地新鲜、健康食品的地理区域。我们使用超市的社区生态学统计数据来量化健康食品的供应情况,并有可能将食品荒漠定义为缺乏多样化食品的区域,而不是简单地以是否有新鲜食品为依据。我们测试了农产品的多样性是否与社区收入或人口统计学有关。在美国佛罗里达州布劳沃德县的超市里,对新鲜农产品的丰富度和多样性进行了量化。从美国人口普查和美国社区调查中检索到社区收入水平和种族/民族构成。尽管多样性存在差异,但没有一个社区的新鲜食品供应始终较少,尽管一个社区中自认为是“白人”的比例与农产品多样性呈正相关。在少数民族比例较高的社区,选择可能较少,但布劳沃德县的农产品多样性没有一致的模式。这种方法提供了一种简单、廉价的方法来描述除了简单距离之外的食品荒漠,并且结果提供了足够精确的信息来识别健康食品供应方面的差距。