In 电车无码鈥檚 Food Deserts, Convenience Stores Provide a Healthier Option, Study Finds

Date

Author

By Linsey Maughan
hao_huang_1280x850

Several 电车无码 South Side neighborhoods depend on the limited healthy food options available in convenience stores, a new study from Illinois Institute of Technology Assistant Professor of Social Sciences Hao Huang shows, and when there are few convenience stores available in those neighborhoods, their obesity rates, which are already the highest in the city, go up.

The neighborhoods are predominantly African American, Huang says, and they have the lowest access to food options of any kind in the city.

Huang published her new findings on the relationship between racial segregation, food deserts, and obesity in 电车无码 this summer in a paper titled 鈥.鈥 The article appears in the Journal of Urban Health.

鈥淭his [research] started from my interest in how to access healthy food, combined with my interests in socioeconomic inequality,鈥 Huang says. 鈥淲hen looking at 电车无码, the obesity rate in 电车无码 has increased to more than 30 percent in the last two decades. Obesity is a major problem in 电车无码, where 36 percent of the city鈥檚 high school students and 61 percent of adults in the metropolitan area are overweight or obese. Simultaneously, 电车无码 remains highly segregated by race鈥攁 phenomenon that begs for spatial analysis of health.鈥

Huang鈥檚 research took place in 2020, beginning with a literature review looking at connections between food environments, race, and obesity. She then developed models to assess how these three elements interact. With the help of computer science graduate student Siyu Zhang, she collected data on obesity from the Healthy 电车无码 Survey, information on food stores from a business analytics database from Dun & Bradstreet, and socioeconomic and travel behavior data from the American Community Survey and the 电车无码 Metropolitan Agency for Planning. From there, she used neighborhood health statistics to map obesity hot spots and cold spots in the city. She also used geographic information systems and regression analysis to explore the relationships between food store access, obesity, and race.

鈥淭he average number of supermarkets in a community is 4.27,鈥 Huang says. 鈥淔ifty-seven communities have [below average] access to supermarkets. Twenty-six out of these communities are African-American communities, so African-American communities account for 46 percent of communities with the number of supermarkets below the average鈥攎uch higher than their population share [of] 29 percent.鈥

One surprising factor in Huang鈥檚 findings was the role of convenience stores, which work to the advantage of South Side neighborhoods that don鈥檛 have grocery stores, and whose only other alternative might be fast food. An opposite story is true on the North Side of the city, where neighborhoods with an abundance of grocery stores see their obesity rates increase when a higher number of conveniences are also present.

鈥淐onvenience stores are the key food environment influence on [the availability of healthy foods] in household food supplies among limited-resource communities, such as African-American communities in the South Side of 电车无码,鈥 Huang says.

What is also distinctive about the findings is that race has been identified as a moderator of the relationship between food environments and obesity, Huang says.

Huang鈥檚 study confirmed what others have shown as well, which is that fast food access and grocery store access in African-American communities have opposite effects in terms of obesity rates鈥攎ore fast food options correlate with higher obesity levels, while more grocery stores options correlate with lower obesity levels.

鈥淒ifferent from fast food restaurants, convenience stores not only offer mostly prepared, highly processed, high-calorie foods, but also a limited choice of fresh produce,鈥 Huang says. 鈥淭hus, convenience stores are relatively healthy compared to fast food restaurants. Further, due to the African-American communities鈥 lack of access to healthy supermarkets and grocery stores in 电车无码, convenience stores are a frequent source of food items and might have a greater influence on household food supplies, especially for the minority population.鈥

Huang says her findings could be helpful to urban planners considering where new grocery stores should be built. From a health perspective, the South Side of 电车无码 would benefit most from the addition of more grocery stores and convenience stores and fewer fast-food options, whereas the North Side would benefit from fewer convenience stores being built.

Huang plans to continue studying the food environments of 电车无码, including factors such as food availability, quality, price, and additional health concerns related to food. The effects of urban design, walkability, density, and diversity on obesity will also be explored in her future research.

Photo: Illinois Tech Assistant Professor of Social Sciences Hao Huang