参与式制图解决美国弗吉尼亚州东南部粮食安全评估的邻里数据不足问题。

IF 3 2区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Nicole S Hutton, George McLeod, Thomas R Allen, Christopher Davis, Alexandra Garnand, Heather Richter, Prachi P Chavan, Leslie Hoglund, Jill Comess, Matthew Herman, Brian Martin, Cynthia Romero
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引用次数: 2

摘要

背景:食物供应不公平。缺陷和概括限制了国家数据集、粮食安全评估和干预措施。需要开展更多的社区一级研究,以发展可扩展和可转移的进程,以及时、精细、细致的数据补充国家和国际比较数据集。参与式地理信息系统(PGIS)通过将地方知识数字化,为解决这些问题提供了一种手段。方法:本研究的目标有两个:(i)确定食物来源和风险数据集中缺失的颗粒位置;(ii)检查空间、社会经济和机构对粮食安全的贡献之间的关系。来自弗吉尼亚州东南部三个城市的29名具有食品分配、营养管理、人类服务和相关研究背景的主题专家参与了参与式绘图过程。结果:结果表明,可公开获得的数据集和其他国家数据集不包括非传统食物来源,或者更新频率不够频繁,无法反映与关闭、扩展或新项目相关的变化。在公开和国家数据集中,几乎有6%的食物来源缺失。食品储藏室、社区花园和冰箱、农贸市场、儿童和成人护理项目,以及社区中心和无家可归者收容所提供的食物,都没有得到很好的体现。超过24平方公里的与会者确定的需要是在美国农业部以外的低收入、低通道地区。粮食安全的经济、物质和社会障碍与运输限制相互关联。这些建议响应了发展机构、国家和世界各区域的国际呼吁,要求采取包括系统性和代际性贫困问题在内的干预方法,将非传统空间纳入粮食分配系统,鼓励或规范商店中的健康食品选择,改善教育机会,增加数据共享。结论:酌情利用城市和区域机构来利用协同活动被认为是实现这些目标的关键,特别是在建立非传统伙伴关系方面。为了解决弗吉尼亚州东南部社区规模的食品安全需求,数据收集和评估应该从消费者和生产者的角度解决环境和利用问题,包括可用性、邻近性、可及性、意识、可负担性、烹饪能力和偏好。PGIS过程可用于促进邻里一级粮食不安全因素的信息共享,并通过与当地主题专家的讨论和更大规模粮食系统动态的背景化,将这些因素转化为干预策略。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Participatory mapping to address neighborhood level data deficiencies for food security assessment in Southeastern Virginia, USA.

Participatory mapping to address neighborhood level data deficiencies for food security assessment in Southeastern Virginia, USA.

Participatory mapping to address neighborhood level data deficiencies for food security assessment in Southeastern Virginia, USA.

Participatory mapping to address neighborhood level data deficiencies for food security assessment in Southeastern Virginia, USA.

Background: Food is not equitably available. Deficiencies and generalizations limit national datasets, food security assessments, and interventions. Additional neighborhood level studies are needed to develop a scalable and transferable process to complement national and internationally comparative data sets with timely, granular, nuanced data. Participatory geographic information systems (PGIS) offer a means to address these issues by digitizing local knowledge.

Methods: The objectives of this study were two-fold: (i) identify granular locations missing from food source and risk datasets and (ii) examine the relation between the spatial, socio-economic, and agency contributors to food security. Twenty-nine subject matter experts from three cities in Southeastern Virginia with backgrounds in food distribution, nutrition management, human services, and associated research engaged in a participatory mapping process.

Results: Results show that publicly available and other national datasets are not inclusive of non-traditional food sources or updated frequently enough to reflect changes associated with closures, expansion, or new programs. Almost 6 percent of food sources were missing from publicly available and national datasets. Food pantries, community gardens and fridges, farmers markets, child and adult care programs, and meals served in community centers and homeless shelters were not well represented. Over 24 km2 of participant identified need was outside United States Department of Agriculture low income, low access areas. Economic, physical, and social barriers to food security were interconnected with transportation limitations. Recommendations address an international call from development agencies, countries, and world regions for intervention methods that include systemic and generational issues with poverty, incorporate non-traditional spaces into food distribution systems, incentivize or regulate healthy food options in stores, improve educational opportunities, increase data sharing.

Conclusions: Leveraging city and regional agency as appropriate to capitalize upon synergistic activities was seen as critical to achieve these goals, particularly for non-traditional partnership building. To address neighborhood scale food security needs in Southeastern Virginia, data collection and assessment should address both environment and utilization issues from consumer and producer perspectives including availability, proximity, accessibility, awareness, affordability, cooking capacity, and preference. The PGIS process utilized to facilitate information sharing about neighborhood level contributors to food insecurity and translate those contributors to intervention strategies through discussion with local subject matter experts and contextualization within larger scale food systems dynamics is transferable.

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来源期刊
International Journal of Health Geographics
International Journal of Health Geographics PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH -
CiteScore
10.20
自引率
2.00%
发文量
17
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: A leader among the field, International Journal of Health Geographics is an interdisciplinary, open access journal publishing internationally significant studies of geospatial information systems and science applications in health and healthcare. With an exceptional author satisfaction rate and a quick time to first decision, the journal caters to readers across an array of healthcare disciplines globally. International Journal of Health Geographics welcomes novel studies in the health and healthcare context spanning from spatial data infrastructure and Web geospatial interoperability research, to research into real-time Geographic Information Systems (GIS)-enabled surveillance services, remote sensing applications, spatial epidemiology, spatio-temporal statistics, internet GIS and cyberspace mapping, participatory GIS and citizen sensing, geospatial big data, healthy smart cities and regions, and geospatial Internet of Things and blockchain.
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