Publication | Closed Access
How Far Do Low-Income Parents Travel to Shop for Food? Empirical Evidence from Two Urban Neighborhoods
152
Citations
36
References
2011
Year
Urban HealthPublic Health NutritionSocial Determinants Of HealthFood ChoiceUrban NeighborhoodsPovertyPublic HealthFood PolicyHealth EducationFood DistributionEconomicsHealth PolicyHealth GeographyHealth PromotionFood ShoppingFood StoresToxic Food EnvironmentCommunity HealthRural HealthUrban EconomicsHealth BehaviorBusinessWic ShoppingEmpirical EvidenceLow-income Parents Travel
Research on the impact of the built environment on obesity and access to healthful foods often fails to incorporate information about how individuals interact with their environment. A sample of 198 low-income WIC recipients from two urban neighborhoods were interviewed about where they do their food shopping and surveys were conducted of food stores in their neighborhoods to assess the availability of healthful foods. Results indicate that participants rarely shop at the closest supermarket, traveling on average 1.58 miles for non-WIC food shopping and 1.07 miles for WIC shopping. Findings suggest that access to healthful foods is not synonymous with geographic proximity.
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