Publication | Closed Access
Neighbourhood Provision of Food and Alcohol Retailing and Social Deprivation in Urban New Zealand
80
Citations
52
References
2008
Year
Urban HealthHealth DisparitiesSocial Determinants Of HealthSocial SciencesHealthy CityUrban SocietyPovertyPublic HealthFood PolicyAlcohol RetailingHousingLocal Food SystemsNeighbourhood ProvisionUrban New ZealandHealth GeographyHealth EquityCommunity ParticipationUrban GeographyCommunity DevelopmentCommunity EnvironmentHealth InequalitiesGlobal HealthSociologyGeographical Information SystemsUrban Condition
Recent research has considered whether a range of social and physical characteristics of residential neighbourhoods are important in explaining social and spatial inequalities in health. One strand of this research has investigated the role of neighbourhood access to retail provision of healthy and affordable food. In this national study we used Geographical Information Systems (GIS) to examine the association between food retail (supermarkets, convenience stores and fast food outlets) and licensed alcohol outlet locations, and an area measure of deprivation for urban neighbourhoods across New Zealand. We found that contrary to the international evidence, for all outlet types, access to a range of retail options tended to be better in more deprived neighbourhoods. The implications of this socio-spatial distribution of food and alcohol retailing in reducing health inequalities are discussed.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1