Exploring the geography of food deserts and potential association with obesity in rural British Columbia

The main goal of this study was to investigate whether residents of rural areas especially in deprived communities in BC have reasonable geographic access to healthy and affordable food providers (e.g., supermarkets, grocery stores, and farmers’ markets), and if lack of access impacts their weight s...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Behjat, Amirmohsen
Other Authors: Ostry, Aleck S.
Language:English
en
Published: 2016
Subjects:
BMI
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7658
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spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-76582016-12-21T05:16:19Z Exploring the geography of food deserts and potential association with obesity in rural British Columbia Behjat, Amirmohsen Ostry, Aleck S. Food Deserts Deprivation Index Farmers' markets Aboriginal reserves BMI ArcGIS The main goal of this study was to investigate whether residents of rural areas especially in deprived communities in BC have reasonable geographic access to healthy and affordable food providers (e.g., supermarkets, grocery stores, and farmers’ markets), and if lack of access impacts their weight status. As well, I investigated the extent to which farmers’ markets improve food accessibility in BC’s rural food deserts. In order to identify food deserts, the methodology which has been developed by USDA was modified and adapted to BC’s rural situations. In the first step, using Principal Component Analysis, deprived rural regions were identified based on selected socioeconomic and demographic variables. Then, using ArcGIS Network Analyst extension, the distance based on driving time from the Population Weighted Centroid of each rural region to the closest supermarket or grocery store was calculated on BC road networks. A 15 minute driving time cut-off was set to identify low access areas. Deprived rural regions which were also classified as low access were identified as food deserts. The impact of food accessibility on the weight status of rural British Columbians was investigated using the 2013-14 Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS). A hierarchical regression model was constructed with weight status of residents as the dependent variable and distance to the closest supermarket or grocery store as the independent target variable. I found that food deserts are more concentrated in the Central Coast, Cariboo, and Peace River regions of the province. In addition, farmers’ markets play no role in providing healthy foods to the residents of food deserts. Lastly, distance from food stores is not significantly associated with the weight status of rural respondents in CCHS data. The findings of this study can be highly beneficial to government officials within different jurisdictions and health practitioners to develop or refine food policies toward providing healthy and affordable food to deprived residents and Aboriginal peoples in rural and remote communities. Graduate 2016-12-10T00:16:57Z 2016-12-10T00:16:57Z 2016 2016-12-09 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7658 English en Available to the World Wide Web
collection NDLTD
language English
en
sources NDLTD
topic Food Deserts
Deprivation Index
Farmers' markets
Aboriginal reserves
BMI
ArcGIS
spellingShingle Food Deserts
Deprivation Index
Farmers' markets
Aboriginal reserves
BMI
ArcGIS
Behjat, Amirmohsen
Exploring the geography of food deserts and potential association with obesity in rural British Columbia
description The main goal of this study was to investigate whether residents of rural areas especially in deprived communities in BC have reasonable geographic access to healthy and affordable food providers (e.g., supermarkets, grocery stores, and farmers’ markets), and if lack of access impacts their weight status. As well, I investigated the extent to which farmers’ markets improve food accessibility in BC’s rural food deserts. In order to identify food deserts, the methodology which has been developed by USDA was modified and adapted to BC’s rural situations. In the first step, using Principal Component Analysis, deprived rural regions were identified based on selected socioeconomic and demographic variables. Then, using ArcGIS Network Analyst extension, the distance based on driving time from the Population Weighted Centroid of each rural region to the closest supermarket or grocery store was calculated on BC road networks. A 15 minute driving time cut-off was set to identify low access areas. Deprived rural regions which were also classified as low access were identified as food deserts. The impact of food accessibility on the weight status of rural British Columbians was investigated using the 2013-14 Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS). A hierarchical regression model was constructed with weight status of residents as the dependent variable and distance to the closest supermarket or grocery store as the independent target variable. I found that food deserts are more concentrated in the Central Coast, Cariboo, and Peace River regions of the province. In addition, farmers’ markets play no role in providing healthy foods to the residents of food deserts. Lastly, distance from food stores is not significantly associated with the weight status of rural respondents in CCHS data. The findings of this study can be highly beneficial to government officials within different jurisdictions and health practitioners to develop or refine food policies toward providing healthy and affordable food to deprived residents and Aboriginal peoples in rural and remote communities. === Graduate
author2 Ostry, Aleck S.
author_facet Ostry, Aleck S.
Behjat, Amirmohsen
author Behjat, Amirmohsen
author_sort Behjat, Amirmohsen
title Exploring the geography of food deserts and potential association with obesity in rural British Columbia
title_short Exploring the geography of food deserts and potential association with obesity in rural British Columbia
title_full Exploring the geography of food deserts and potential association with obesity in rural British Columbia
title_fullStr Exploring the geography of food deserts and potential association with obesity in rural British Columbia
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the geography of food deserts and potential association with obesity in rural British Columbia
title_sort exploring the geography of food deserts and potential association with obesity in rural british columbia
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7658
work_keys_str_mv AT behjatamirmohsen exploringthegeographyoffooddesertsandpotentialassociationwithobesityinruralbritishcolumbia
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