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Release Date: Sep. 10, 2004
FAST FOOD DENSITY IN POOR AND BLACK NEIGHBORHOODS MAY CONTRIBUTE
TO OBESITY EPIDEMIC
By Ann Quigley, Contributing Editor
Health Behavior News Service
The number of fast food outlets in poor and black neighborhoods may play a
role in the obesity epidemic among residents of these areas, suggest the results
of a geographical survey.
Obesity also has multiple genetic and behavioral causes, but easy access to
fast food, which tends to be high in fat, may be a key environmental cause
of obesity blacks and low-income individuals.
“More convenient access likely leads to the increased consumption of
fast food in these populations,” says study author Jason Block, M.D.,
M.P.H., of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.
Americans in general are eating
more fast food—the percentage of fast
food calories in the American diet has increased from 3% to 12% over the last
20 years. “Despite stable physical activity patterns during the last
20 years, Americans are eating more, portion sizes have increased substantially,
and inexpensive, high-calorie food is now ubiquitous,” Block notes.
Block and colleagues used computer
software to map out and analyze the placement of New Orleans fast food restaurants
such as Church’s Chicken, Pizza
Hut, Subway, Burger King, and Taco Bell. They found that predominantly black
neighborhoods had 2.4 fast food restaurants per square mile, while white neighborhoods
only had 1.5 restaurants per square mile.
The study results appear in the current issue of the American Journal of Preventive
Medicine.
Their study cannot prove that increased
fast food access makes people eat more of it but “theoretically, more convenient access to fast food coupled
with the decreased availability of healthy food in black and low-income neighborhoods
may increase consumption of unhealthy foods,” Block says.
Higher income and white neighborhoods have more supermarkets than poor and
black neighborhoods, which tend to be served by smaller grocery or convenience-type
stores. Research shows that supermarkets offer more healthy foods than grocery
and convenience stores, according to the study.
Block and colleagues call for more research to examine whether fast food joints
are a chicken or an egg contributing to obesity in black and low-income populations.
It is possible that the market offers unhealthy foods in response to the preferences
of these populations. Or, the food preferences in black and low-income neighborhoods
may be shaped by what is available nearby, especially since residents of these
communities often have less access to transportation.
“Likewise, because of limited financial resources, black and low-income
populations may simply seek out the most calories for the lowest price,” Block
adds.
# # # FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Health Behavior News Service: (202) 387-2829 or www.hbns.org.
Interviews: Contact Fran Simon fsimon@tulane.edu
American Journal of Preventive Medicine: Contact the editorial office at (858)
457-7292.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Ira R. Allen
Director of Public Affairs
202.387.2829
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