Associations Between Access to Food Stores and Adolescent Body Mass Index
Background
Environmental factors such as the availability of local-area food stores may be important contributors to the increasing rate of obesity among U.S. adolescents.
Methods
Repeated cross-sections of individual-level data on adolescents drawn from the Monitoring the Future surveys linked by geocode identifiers to data on food store availability were used to examine associations between adolescent weight and the availability of four types of grocery food stores that include chain supermarkets, nonchain supermarkets, convenience stores, and other grocery stores, holding constant a variety of other individual- and neighborhood-level influences.
Results
Increased availability of chain supermarkets was statistically significantly associated with lower adolescent Body Mass Index (BMI) and overweight and that greater availability of convenience stores was statistically significantly associated with higher BMI and overweight. The association between supermarket availability and weight was larger for African-American students compared to white or Hispanic students and larger for students in households in which the mother worked full time.
Conclusions
Economic and urban planning land use policies which increase the availability of chain supermarkets may have beneficial effects on youths’ weight outcomes.
aDepartment of Economics, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois
bInstitute for Health Research and Policy, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois
cDepartment of Economics, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada
dSurvey Research Center, Institute for Social Research, The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan
Address correspondence and reprint requests to: Lisa M. Powell, PhD, Institute for Health, Research and Policy, University of Illinois at Chicago, 1747 West Roosevelt Road, M/C 275 Room 558, Chicago IL 60305.