Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Nutrients. 2024 Jul 10;16(14):2196. doi: 10.3390/nu16142196.
Diet-related disease is rising, disproportionately affecting minority communities in which small food retail stores swamp supermarkets. Barriers to healthy food access were exacerbated by the pandemic. We examined the following: (1) individual- and household-level factors in a sample of Baltimore community members who regularly shop at corner stores and (2) how these factors are associated with indicators of dietary quality.
Cross-sectional data were collected using an online survey to capture sociodemographics, anthropometrics, and food sourcing, spending, and consumption patterns. Concurrent quantitative and qualitative analyses were conducted in Stata 18 and ATLAS.ti.
This study was set in Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
The participants included adults ( = 127) living or working in Baltimore who identified as regular customers of their neighborhood corner store.
The respondents were majority Black and low-income, with a high prevalence of food insecurity (62.2%) and overweight/obesity (66.9%). Most (82.76%) shopped in their neighborhood corner store weekly. One-third (33.4%) of beverage calories were attributed to sugar-sweetened beverages, and few met the recommended servings for fruits and vegetables or fiber (27.2% and 10.4%, respectively). Being Black and not owning a home were associated with lower beverage and fiber intake, and not owning a home was also associated with lower fruit and vegetable intake. Food insecurity was associated with higher beverage intake, while WIC enrollment was associated with higher fruit and vegetable and fiber intakes. Open-ended responses contextualized post-pandemic food sourcing and consumption in this setting.
This paper helps characterize the consumers of a complex urban food system. The findings will inform future strategies for consumer-engaged improvement of local food environments.
与饮食相关的疾病不断增加,不成比例地影响到小食品零售商店充斥超市的少数族裔社区。大流行加剧了获得健康食品的障碍。我们检查了以下方面:(1)在经常光顾街角商店的巴尔的摩社区成员样本中的个人和家庭一级的因素;(2)这些因素与饮食质量指标的关联。
使用在线调查收集横断面数据,以捕捉社会人口统计学、人体测量学以及食品采购、支出和消费模式。在 Stata 18 和 ATLAS.ti 中同时进行定量和定性分析。
本研究在美国马里兰州巴尔的摩进行。
参与者包括居住或工作在巴尔的摩的成年人(n=127),他们认为自己是邻里街角商店的常客。
受访者主要是黑人,收入较低,粮食不安全(62.2%)和超重/肥胖(66.9%)的发生率较高。大多数(82.76%)每周在他们的邻里街角商店购物。三分之一(33.4%)的饮料卡路里来自含糖饮料,很少有人达到水果和蔬菜或纤维的推荐摄入量(分别为 27.2%和 10.4%)。为黑人,没有住房与较低的饮料和纤维摄入量相关,而没有住房也与较低的水果和蔬菜摄入量相关。粮食不安全与较高的饮料摄入量相关,而 WIC 注册与较高的水果和蔬菜及纤维摄入量相关。开放式回复使本研究背景下的大流行后食品采购和消费有了更深入的了解。
本文有助于描述复杂城市食品系统的消费者。调查结果将为消费者参与的当地食品环境改善策略提供信息。