| Literature DB >> 35897330 |
Ana Luisa Reyes-Puente1, Dalia Guadalupe Peña-Portilla2, Sofía Alcalá-Reyes1, Laura Rodríguez-Bustos1,3, Juan Manuel Núñez4.
Abstract
The concept of food environment refers to the opportunities; environments; and physical, economic, political, and socio-cultural conditions that frame the interaction of people with the food system and shape decisions about food acquisition and consumption. This study analyzes the relationships between the characteristics of urban environments and the availability of retail food through the evaluation of physical and financial access to food in the Metropolitan Area of the Valley of Mexico (MAVM) between 2010 and 2020. Using Geographic Information Systems (GISs), both physical access through network distance to economic food retail units and financial access through socioeconomic status at the block scale were evaluated. The network distance and socioeconomic status results were used as criteria for the spatially explicit classification of the MAVM into food deserts, oases, and swamps. Food deserts are the most abundant food environments but only increased in the third and fourth metropolitan contours. Swamps have increased throughout the city, related to the proliferation of convenience stores that have replaced grocery stores. This study contributes evidence at a local and regional scale required for the future urban planning of the MAVM and for public health and sustainability programs focusing on treating food-related diseases.Entities:
Keywords: food deserts; food environments; food oases; food swamps; sustainable food system
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35897330 PMCID: PMC9331805 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19158960
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Figure 1Study area.
Food retail units.
| Food Retail Units (DENUE Code) | Description |
|---|---|
| Supermarkets (462111) | Commercial establishments or self-service chains regarded as modern trade units. Characterized by having a broad, varied supply of fresh and packed food [ |
| Convenience stores (462112) | Establishments with a multi-branch franchise format, with a broad geographical distribution, specializing in the sale of groceries, canned goods, and beverages [ |
| Grocery stores: | Establishments in the form of corner shops and greengrocers, bulk seeds and the sale of meat, fish, and chicken. Considered traditional business units based on family self-employment [ |
Note: Supermarkets include public markets. The selected data correspond to raw material stores for food preparation. Fixed establishments dedicated to the sale of prepared food, such as restaurants and cafeterias, and itinerant markets are not considered, since they are regarded as a small sector compared to the variety of products in supermarkets, convenience stores, and local businesses. Source: [44,45] Delgado (1992); Teja & López (2013). Compiled by the authors.
Figure 2Food retail units in the MAVM, 2010–2020.
Figure 3Socioeconomic status for the MAVM, 2010–2020.
Urban food environments in the MAVM, 2010–2020.
| Urban Food Environments | 2010 | 2020 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oases | Deserts | Swamps | Oases | Deserts | Swamps | |
| Central city (0) | 87,701 | 202,796 | 151,846 | 137,222 | 31,854 | 272,738 |
| First contour (1) | 41,532 | 1,582,515 | 82,623 | 63,340 | 620,304 | 239,371 |
| Second contour (2) | 39,935 | 2,291,166 | 93,120 | 31,040 | 1,298,333 | 182,327 |
| Third contour (3) | 8781 | 2,302,102 | 57,770 | 17,359 | 1,566,886 | 212,731 |
| Fourth contour (4) | 180 | 879,690 | 5592 | 375 | 1,071,759 | 62,155 |
| total | 178,129 | 7,258,269 | 390,951 | 249,336 | 4,589,136 | 969,322 |
Note: (n) Number of blocks.
Figure 4Changes in urban food environments of the MAVM, 2010–2020.