Eliminating food deserts may not achieve improved dietary quality in the US

Initiatives to eliminate food deserts, low-income geographic areas that lack access to a supermarket or large grocery store, may not have an effect on improving dietary quality or reducing disparities in diet quality according to Jason Block and S V Subramanian from Harvard University, United States, in a Policy Forum article published this week in PLOS Medicine.

Reducing food deserts has been a priority of federal and state governments, often through public-private partnerships, as well as international groups, such as the World Health Organization. However, in their article the authors argue that the evidence supporting the elimination of food deserts as a strategy to reduce disparities in diet quality is weak. They discuss several other strategies that have the potential to lower disparities in diet quality more than eliminating food deserts. These strategies include education initiatives, changes in food assistance programs and taxing unhealthy food.

The authors conclude, “[a]ddressing disparities in dietary quality may have important payoffs for the health of the population: we should promote policies and programs to support these changes while studying their effectiveness. These strategies do not preclude the elimination of food deserts but rather build a necessary infrastructure to promote healthy food consumption, in any neighborhood. Many reasons, such as economic and social justice, exist to support such initiatives and to remedy the lack of healthy food availability in low-income communities. We just should not expect the reduction of food deserts to have much impact on the prevailing health crisis of our time. We need to focus our efforts on initiatives more likely to improve dietary quality and decrease disparities.”

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Policy Forum

Funding:

JB and SVS receive funding from R01HL109263 (PI: O’Malley, Subramanian), a study examining the relationship between the food environment and body weight, and JB receives funding from a mentored career development award K23HL111211 (PI: Block).

Competing Interests:

The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Citation:

Block JP, Subramanian SV (2015) Moving Beyond ‘Food Deserts’: Reorienting United States Policies to Reduce Disparities in Diet Quality. PLoS Med 12(12): e1001914. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001914

Author Affiliations:

Obesity Prevention Program, Department of Population Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America

Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies, Harvard T H Chain School of Public Health, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America
Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Harvard T H Chan School of Public Health Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America

IN YOUR COVERAGE PLEASE USE THIS URL TO PROVIDE ACCESS TO THE FREELY AVAILABLE PAPER:

http://journals.plos.org/plosmedicine/article?id=10.1371/journal.pmed.1001914

Contact:

S V Subramanian

617-432-6299

[email protected]

Harvard School of Public Health

Department of Society, Human Development and Health

677 Huntington Avenue

KRESGE 7th floor

Boston, MA 2115

UNITED STATES

Jason Block

617-921-9537 (cell as we are moving to new offices on the 9-10, so office phone not available)

[email protected]

Harvard Medical School/Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute

Department of Population Medicine

Landmark Center

401 Park Drive, Suite 401

Boston, MA 02215