Do minority and poor neighborhoods have higher access to fast-food restaurants in the United States?

View Abstract

BACKGROUND

Disproportionate access to unhealthy foods in poor or minority neighborhoods may be a primary determinant of obesity disparities. We investigated whether fast-food access varies by Census block group (CBG) percent black and poverty.

METHODS

We measured the average driving distance from each CBG population-weighted centroid to the five closest top ten fast-food chains and CBG percent black and percent below poverty.

RESULTS

Among 209,091 CBGs analyzed (95.1% of all US CBGs), CBG percent black was positively associated with fast-food access controlling for population density and percent poverty (average distance to fast-food was 3.56 miles closer (95% CI: -3.64, -3.48) in CBGs with the highest versus lowest quartile of percentage of black residents). Poverty was not independently associated with fast-food access. The relationship between fast-food access and race was stronger in CBGs with higher levels of poverty (p for interaction <0.0001).

CONCLUSIONS

Predominantly black neighborhoods had higher access to fast-food while poverty was not an independent predictor of fast-food access.

Investigators
Abbreviation
Health Place
Publication Date
2014-06-17
Volume
29
Page Numbers
10-7
Pubmed ID
24945103
Medium
Print-Electronic
Full Title
Do minority and poor neighborhoods have higher access to fast-food restaurants in the United States?
Authors
James P, Arcaya MC, Parker DM, Tucker-Seeley RD, Subramanian SV