Healthy home food environments of pregnant Black women are shaped by food outlet access and participation in nutrition assistance programs

Author:

Nicholas Khristopher M.12ORCID,Thompson Amanda L.123ORCID,Wasser Heather M.2,Bentley Margaret E.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Carolina Population Center University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

2. Department of Nutrition University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

3. Department of Anthropology University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesImproving access to healthy food in Black communities is imperative to combat intergenerational health disparities. Pregnant Black women represent an especially vulnerable population to multiple (and overlapping) sources of socioeconomic and political disenfranchisement and thus for whom maternal nutrition is crucial. This study aimed to (1) define household food environment types, (2) determine whether the distribution of community food outlets is associated with these household food environment types, and (3) determine whether the community‐household food environment relationship differs by maternal education or participation in nutrition assistance programs.MethodsCross‐sectional data for pregnant Black women in North Carolina (n = 429) come from the Mothers & Others study, an obesity‐prevention randomized control trial, with linked spatial data on all community food outlets (n = 6312) in the study area in 2015. Factor analysis was used to define household food environment types. These factor scores were regressed on access metrics to community food outlets. Adjusted linear regressions tested interaction by maternal education and nutrition assistance programs.ResultsFour household food environment types were defined: Factor 1 (fresh fruits and vegetables (F/V), low snack), Factor 2 (canned F/V, sweet drinks), Factor 3 (dried/frozen F/V, candy), and Factor 4 (low F/V, soda). Having more convenience stores within 0.25 miles was associated with higher Factor 4 scores. No food outlets were associated with higher Factor 1 scores overall. However, SNAP or WIC participating households saw higher Factor 1 scores with increased access to supermarkets, convenience stores, and dollar stores.ConclusionsNutrition assistance programs play an important role as buffers against unhealthy community food environments which influence household food environments and maternal nutrition.

Funder

Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Anthropology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Anatomy

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