Has New York City fallen into the local trap?

Public Health
K Libman

Abstract

Municipal policies aiming to improve equity in food access and health often rely on the assumption that neighborhoods with limited healthy food availability and high levels of diet-related illness should be the subject of targeted policy-driven change. This study explored this assumption in the context of recent food policy developments in New York City with the objective of empirically examining the geography of everyday food behavior in high- and low-income neighborhoods. This research used a multi method comparative design. Areas at the poles of income inequality in New York City were identified using census data and geographic information systems. Qualitative and geographic data were collected from individual eaters living and/or working in those areas. A review of food policies in New York City from 2005 to 2012. Qualitative and geographic data were collected using space-time food diaries and mental mapping interviews. People living in the low-income study area had more localized food geographies than residents of the high-income study area. Individual-level qualitative data revealed that eaters with the least financial resources, those with physical disabilities, and those who were unemployed reported all or nearly all of...Continue Reading

References

Nov 26, 2002·Obesity Research·Rachel K Johnson
Mar 23, 2005·Lancet·Michael Marmot
Nov 16, 2005·Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health·Steven CumminsLeigh Sparks
Mar 23, 2007·International Journal of Epidemiology·Steven Cummins
Jan 4, 2008·American Journal of Public Health·Katherine L Frohlich, Louise Potvin
Aug 30, 2008·JAMA : the Journal of the American Medical Association·Lynn Silver, Mary T Bassett
Jun 7, 2011·Journal of Urban Health : Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine·Susan SaegertKimberly Libman
Jun 29, 2013·The International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity·Thomas Burgoine, Pablo Monsivais

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Citations

Mar 31, 2015·Public Health·Sue Atkinson, Nicholas Freudenberg

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