Associations of Neighborhood Food Retail Environments with Weight Status in a Regional Pediatric Health System.

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q2 PEDIATRICS
Qianxia Jiang, Lauren Fitzpatrick, Helena H Laroche, Sarah Hampl, Sandro Steinbach, Bethany Forseth, Ann M Davis, Chelsea Steel, Jordan A Carlson
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Abstract

Background: There have been mixed findings on the relationships between childhood obesity and macroscale retail food environments. The current study investigates associations of the neighborhood retail food environment with changes in children's weight status over 6 years in the Kansas City Metropolitan area. Methods: Anthropometrics and home addresses were collected during routine well-child visits in a large pediatric hospital (n = 4493; >75% were Black or Latinx children). Children had measures collected during two time periods ([Time 1] 2012-2014, [Time 2] 2017-2019). Establishment-level food environment data were used to determine the number of four types of food outlets within a 0.5-mile buffer from the children's residence: supermarkets/large grocery stores, convenience stores/small grocery stores, limited-service restaurants, and full-service restaurants. Children who moved residences between periods were "movers" (n = 1052). Associations of baseline and changes in food environment status with Time 2 weight status were assessed using mixed-effects models. Results: Movers who experienced no change in the number of convenience stores or small grocery stores within a 0.5-mile of their home had increased likelihoods of having overweight/obesity and less favorable BMIz changes, compared with movers who experienced a decrease in convenience stores/small grocery stores within a 0.5-mile distance. No associations were observed among nonmovers. Conclusion: Findings suggest that moving to an area with fewer unhealthy retail food outlets (e.g., convenience stores) is associated with a lower risk of obesity in children. Future research is needed to determine whether larger-scale changes to the retail food environment within a neighborhood can support children's healthy weight.

邻里食品零售环境与地区儿科医疗系统体重状况的关系。
背景:关于儿童肥胖与宏观零售食品环境之间关系的研究结果不一。本研究调查了堪萨斯城大都会区附近零售食品环境与儿童体重状况 6 年变化之间的关系。研究方法在一家大型儿科医院的常规儿童健康检查中收集人体测量数据和家庭住址(n = 4493;>75% 为黑人或拉丁裔儿童)。在两个时间段([时间 1] 2012-2014 年,[时间 2] 2017-2019 年)收集了儿童的测量数据。机构级食品环境数据用于确定儿童住所 0.5 英里缓冲区内四种类型食品店的数量:超市/大型杂货店、便利店/小型杂货店、有限服务餐馆和全面服务餐馆。在不同时期搬家的儿童为 "搬家者"(n = 1052)。采用混合效应模型评估了食物环境状况的基线和变化与时间 2 体重状况的关系。结果显示与 0.5 英里范围内的便利店/小杂货店数量减少的搬家者相比,离家 0.5 英里范围内的便利店/小杂货店数量没有变化的搬家者超重/肥胖的可能性增加,BMIz 变化也较小。在非搬迁者中没有观察到任何关联。结论研究结果表明,搬迁到不健康食品零售店(如便利店)较少的地区与儿童肥胖风险较低有关。今后还需要进行研究,以确定对社区内的零售食品环境进行更大规模的改变是否有助于儿童的健康体重。
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来源期刊
Childhood Obesity
Childhood Obesity PEDIATRICS-
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
8.00%
发文量
95
期刊介绍: Childhood Obesity is the only peer-reviewed journal that delivers actionable, real-world obesity prevention and weight management strategies for children and adolescents. Health disparities and cultural sensitivities are addressed, and plans and protocols are recommended to effect change at the family, school, and community level. The Journal also reports on the problem of access to effective healthcare and delivers evidence-based solutions to overcome these barriers.
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