| Literature DB >> 24833697 |
Stefanie Vandevijvere1, Boyd Swinburn1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Unhealthy diets are heavily driven by unhealthy food environments. The International Network for Food and Obesity/non-communicable diseases (NCDs) Research, Monitoring and Action Support (INFORMAS) has been established to reduce obesity, NCDs and their related inequalities globally. This paper describes the design and methods of the first-ever, comprehensive national survey on the healthiness of food environments and the public and private sector policies influencing them, as a first step towards global monitoring of food environments and policies. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: A package of 11 substudies has been identified: (1) food composition, labelling and promotion on food packages; (2) food prices, shelf space and placement of foods in different outlets (mainly supermarkets); (3) food provision in schools/early childhood education (ECE) services and outdoor food promotion around schools/ECE services; (4) density of and proximity to food outlets in communities; food promotion to children via (5) television, (6) magazines, (7) sport club sponsorships, and (8) internet and social media; (9) analysis of the impact of trade and investment agreements on food environments; (10) government policies and actions; and (11) private sector actions and practices. For the substudies on food prices, provision, promotion and retail, 'environmental equity' indicators have been developed to check progress towards reducing diet-related health inequalities. Indicators for these modules will be assessed by tertiles of area deprivation index or school deciles. International 'best practice benchmarks' will be identified, against which to compare progress of countries on improving the healthiness of their food environments and policies. DISSEMINATION: This research is highly original due to the very 'upstream' approach being taken and its direct policy relevance. The detailed protocols will be offered to and adapted for countries of varying size and income in order to establish INFORMAS globally as a new monitoring initiative to reduce obesity and diet-related NCDs. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions.Entities:
Keywords: food policy; global health; monitoring; non-communicable diseases; obesity
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24833697 PMCID: PMC4025455 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005339
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Examples of ‘environmental equity’ indicators for the national study on food environments in New Zealand
| Food provision |
Substudy 4 ( |
| Food retail |
Substudy 2: Frequency of ‘food deserts’ and ‘food swamps’ in least (NZDep 1–3), average (NZDep 4–7), most deprived (NZDep 8–10) areas and areas with high versus low % of Maori and Pacific residents Substudy 2: Relative density of ‘unhealthy’ food outlets in a buffer zone around high (8–10), mid (4–7) and low (1–3) decile schools Substudy 3: Ratio of shelf space devoted to ‘healthy’ versus ‘unhealthy’ foods by NZDep2013 tertile (based on location supermarkets) Substudy 3: Percentage of junk-food free check-outs by NZDep2013 tertile (based on location supermarkets) |
| Food prices |
Substudy 3: Price differentials between ‘healthy’ foods and meals and ‘less healthy’ foods and meals by NZDep2013 tertiles (based on location of supermarkets or other outlet types) Substudy 3: Price differentials and affordability of healthy versus current diets for Maori, Pacific and NZ European adults (from national nutrition survey data) |
| Food promotion |
Substudy 4: The number of outdoor advertisements for unhealthy foods in a buffer zone of 500 m around low (1–3), mid (4–7) and high (8–10) decile schools |
NZ, New Zealand; NZDep, New Zealand Deprivation Index.