Population mobility data provides meaningful indicators of fast food intake and diet-related diseases in diverse populations

Author:

Horn Abigail L.ORCID,Bell Brooke M.,Bulle Bueno Bernardo García,Bahrami MohsenORCID,Bozkaya BurçinORCID,Cui Yan,Wilson John P.ORCID,Pentland Alex,Moro EstebanORCID,de la Haye KaylaORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe characteristics of food environments people are exposed to, such as the density of fast food (FF) outlets, can impact their diet and risk for diet-related chronic disease. Previous studies examining the relationship between food environments and nutritional health have produced mixed findings, potentially due to the predominant focus on static food environments around people’s homes. As smartphone ownership increases, large-scale data on human mobility (i.e., smartphone geolocations) represents a promising resource for studying dynamic food environments that people have access to and visit as they move throughout their day. This study investigates whether mobility data provides meaningful indicators of diet, measured as FF intake, and diet-related disease, evaluating its usefulness for food environment research. Using a mobility dataset consisting of 14.5 million visits to geolocated food outlets in Los Angeles County (LAC) across a representative sample of 243,644 anonymous and opted-in adult smartphone users in LAC, we construct measures of visits to FF outlets aggregated over users living in neighborhood. We find that the aggregated measures strongly and significantly correspond to self-reported FF intake, obesity, and diabetes in a diverse, representative sample of 8,036 LAC adults included in a population health survey carried out by the LAC Department of Public Health. Visits to FF outlets were a better predictor of individuals’ obesity and diabetes than their self-reported FF intake, controlling for other known risks. These findings suggest mobility data represents a valid tool to study people’s use of dynamic food environments and links to diet and health.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | Center for Information Technology

NSF | Directorate for Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences

MIT Connection Science

MIT Connection Science Agencia Estatal de Investigación (Spain)

University of Southern California’s Keck School of Medicine Dean’s Pilot Funding Program

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Health Information Management,Health Informatics,Computer Science Applications,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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