A community-based system dynamics approach suggests solutions for improving healthy food access in a low-income urban environment

Little is known about the mechanisms through which neighborhood-level factors (e.g., social support, economic opportunity) relate to suboptimal availability of healthy foods in low-income urban communities. We engaged a diverse group of chain and local food outlet owners, residents, neighborhood org...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2019-05, Vol.14 (5), p.e0216985
Hauptverfasser: Mui, Yeeli, Ballard, Ellis, Lopatin, Eli, Thornton, Rachel L J, Pollack Porter, Keshia M, Gittelsohn, Joel
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container_start_page e0216985
container_title PloS one
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creator Mui, Yeeli
Ballard, Ellis
Lopatin, Eli
Thornton, Rachel L J
Pollack Porter, Keshia M
Gittelsohn, Joel
description Little is known about the mechanisms through which neighborhood-level factors (e.g., social support, economic opportunity) relate to suboptimal availability of healthy foods in low-income urban communities. We engaged a diverse group of chain and local food outlet owners, residents, neighborhood organizations, and city agencies based in Baltimore, MD. Eighteen participants completed a series of exercises based on a set of pre-defined scripts through an interactive, iterative group model building process over a two-day community-based workshop. This process culminated in the development of causal loop diagrams, based on participants' perspectives, illustrating the dynamic factors in an urban neighborhood food system. Synthesis of diagrams yielded 21 factors and their embedded feedback loops. Crime played a prominent role in several feedback loops within the neighborhood food system: contributing to healthy food being "risky food," supporting unhealthy food stores, and severing social ties important for learning about healthy food. Findings shed light on a new framework for thinking about barriers related to healthy food access and pointed to potential new avenues for intervention, such as reducing neighborhood crime.
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subjects Adult
Baltimore - epidemiology
Biology and Life Sciences
Commerce
Community
Community relations
Crime
Diet, Healthy
Distribution
Earth Sciences
Embedded systems
Environment
Feedback
Feedback loops
Female
Food
Food and nutrition
Food availability
Food chains
Food Supply
Grocery stores
Health aspects
Health care
Health foods
Health Promotion
Humans
Hypotheses
Income
Iterative methods
Local food
Low income groups
Male
Management
Medical research
Medicine and Health Sciences
Methods
Middle Aged
Neighborhoods
Nutrition research
Obesity
Obesity - epidemiology
Obesity - prevention & control
Organizations
Pediatrics
Poverty
Preventive medicine
Public health
Residence Characteristics
Social discrimination learning
Social interactions
Social science research
Social Sciences
Social support
Socioeconomic factors
System dynamics
Urban areas
Urban environment
Urban environments
Urban poor
Urban Population
Workshops (Educational programs)
title A community-based system dynamics approach suggests solutions for improving healthy food access in a low-income urban environment
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