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Greater access to healthy food outlets in the home and school environment is associated with better dietary quality in young children.

Authors :
Barrett M
Crozier S
Lewis D
Godfrey K
Robinson S
Cooper C
Inskip H
Baird J
Vogel C
Source :
Public health nutrition [Public Health Nutr] 2017 Dec; Vol. 20 (18), pp. 3316-3325. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Aug 31.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Objective: To explore associations between dietary quality and access to different types of food outlets around both home and school in primary school-aged children.<br />Design: Cross-sectional observational study.<br />Setting: Hampshire, UK.<br />Subjects: Children (n 1173) in the Southampton Women's Survey underwent dietary assessment at age 6 years by FFQ and a standardised diet quality score was calculated. An activity space around each child's home and school was created using ArcGIS. Cross-sectional observational food outlet data were overlaid to derive four food environment measures: counts of supermarkets, healthy specialty stores (e.g. greengrocers), fast-food outlets and total number of outlets, and a relative measure representing healthy outlets (supermarkets and specialty stores) as a proportion of total retail and fast-food outlets.<br />Results: In univariate multilevel linear regression analyses, better diet score was associated with exposure to greater number of healthy specialty stores (β=0·025 sd/store: 95 % CI 0·007, 0·044) and greater exposure to healthy outlets relative to all outlets in children's activity spaces (β=0·068 sd/10 % increase in healthy outlets as a proportion of total outlets, 95 % CI 0·018, 0·117). After adjustment for mothers' educational qualification and level of home neighbourhood deprivation, the relationship between diet and healthy specialty stores remained robust (P=0·002) while the relationship with the relative measure weakened (P=0·095). Greater exposure to supermarkets and fast-food outlets was associated with better diet only in the adjusted models (P=0·017 and P=0·014, respectively).<br />Conclusions: The results strengthen the argument for local authorities to increase the number of healthy food outlets to which young children are exposed.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1475-2727
Volume :
20
Issue :
18
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Public health nutrition
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28854995
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/S1368980017002075