1. Developing a mobile produce distribution system for low-income urban residents in food deserts.
- Author
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Widener MJ, Metcalf SS, and Bar-Yam Y
- Subjects
- Food Services economics, Food Services standards, Food Supply economics, Food Supply methods, Fruit economics, Fruit supply & distribution, Humans, Maps as Topic, Models, Organizational, New York, Poverty Areas, Transportation economics, Transportation methods, Urban Health, Vegetables economics, Vegetables supply & distribution, Food Services organization & administration, Food Supply standards
- Abstract
Low-income households in the contemporary city often lack adequate access to healthy foods, like fresh produce, due to a variety of social and spatial barriers that result in neighborhoods being underserved by full-service supermarkets. Because of this, residents commonly resort to purchasing food at fast food restaurants or convenience stores with poor selections of produce. Research has shown that maintaining a healthy diet contributes to disease prevention and overall quality of life. This research seeks to increase low-income residents' access to healthy foods by addressing spatial constraints through the characterization of a mobile market distribution system model that serves in-need neighborhoods. The model optimally locates mobile markets based on the geographic distribution of these residents. Using data from the medium-sized city of Buffalo, New York, results show that, with relatively few resources, the model increases these residents' access to healthy foods, helping to create a healthier city.
- Published
- 2012
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