Food Deserts- The link between income and access

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Food Insecurity and food accessibility are major problems not only in rural areas but also low-income urban areas throughout the United States. The term “food desert” or an area with limited or no access to healthy, affordable and nutritious food was coined during a U.K. Study into food accessibility for those in the lowest income neighborhoods which contained no major grocery store and had the lowest rate of car ownership. This problem has come across the pond and we've seen many major grocery retailers flee from cities and move to the more profitable suburbs, what's worse is as grocery stores consolidate they leave many neighborhoods under served by convenience stores or fast food outlets. The prevalence of more processed, unhealthy convenience food coupled with the high cost and travel barriers for healthy, fresh food has the affect of plaguing these low-income neighborhoods with health crises like diabetes and obesity as well as food insecurity.

In a dissertation on food deserts and public planning Andrea Sparks who holds a Masters degree from the University of Oregon in Public Planning writes that:“we have been able to document in a statistical fashion that zip codes with a larger public assistance load do have fewer stores per capita in these twenty-one large cities which account for approximately thirty percent of the U.S. Population". This means that in these cities those on public assistance will either have to travel farther or pay more for their groceries at convenience stores or other outlets that often charge a premium for fresh produce and other healthy dietary staples. Food deserts seem not to be necessarily only geographical but financial barriers to what many of us take for granted, access to healthy nutritiou...

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Works Cited:
Hattori A, An R, Sturm R. Neighborhood Food Outlets, Diet, and Obesity Among California Adults, 2007 and 2009. Prev Chronic Dis 2013;10:120123. Web. Rand.org

Hottman, Sara. "Legacy Health Brings Patients Healthy Food from My Street Grocery, as Well as Vouchers to Pay for It." Oregonlive.com. The Oregonian, 04 July 2013. Web. 09 Nov. 2013.

Sparks, Andrea, “Measuring Food Deserts: A Comparison of Models Measuring the Spatial Accessibility of Supermarkets in Portland, Oregon.” UO libraries Web. https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/7863

Walker et. Al,“Do residents of food deserts express different food buying preferences compared to residents of food oases? A mixed-methods analysis.”, International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity 2012, Web. http://www.ijbnpa.org/content/

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