Abstract

Introduction: Neighborhood environment factors are relevant for dietary behaviors, but associations between home neighborhood context and disease prevention behaviors vary depending on the definition of neighborhood. The present study uses a publicly available dataset to examine whether associations between neighborhood socioeconomic status (NSES) and fruit/vegetable (FV) consumption vary when NSES is defined by different neighborhood sizes and shapes.Methods: We analyzed data from 1,736 adults with data in GeoFLASHE, a geospatial extension of the National Cancer Institute's Family Life, Activity, Sun, Health, and Eating Study (FLASHE). We examined correlations of NSES values across neighborhood buffer shapes (circular or street network) and sizes (ranging from 400 to 1,200 m) and ran weighted simple and multivariable regressions modeling frequency of FV consumption by NSES for each neighborhood definition. Regressions were also stratified by gender.Results: NSES measures were highly correlated across various neighborhood buffer definitions. In models adjusted for socio-demographics, circular buffers of all sizes and street buffers 750 m and larger were significantly associated with FV consumption frequency for women only.Conclusion: NSES may be particularly relevant for women's FV consumption, and further research can examine whether these associations are explained by access to food stores, food shopping behavior, and/or psychosocial variables. Although different NSES buffers are highly correlated, researchers should conceptually determine spatial areas a priori.

Highlights

  • Neighborhood environment factors are relevant for dietary behaviors, but associations between home neighborhood context and disease prevention behaviors vary depending on the definition of neighborhood

  • This issue [6] has been observed in analyses of neighborhood socioeconomic status (NSES) and the food environment [7] and is important to consider for understanding whether a true relationship between the neighborhood-level factor and behavioral outcome exists, or whether it is an artifact of how the neighborhood-level factor is defined

  • Combined with research demonstrating gender differences in amount of FV consumption and related behaviors such as food shopping [15, 16], we examined whether NSES-FV associations at all neighborhood definitions differed across gender

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Summary

Introduction

Neighborhood environment factors are relevant for dietary behaviors, but associations between home neighborhood context and disease prevention behaviors vary depending on the definition of neighborhood. The present study uses a publicly available dataset to examine whether associations between neighborhood socioeconomic status (NSES) and fruit/vegetable (FV) consumption vary when NSES is defined by different neighborhood sizes and shapes. Neighborhood socioeconomic status (NSES) is one factor that may be relevant for understanding dietary behaviors and obesity. Differences regarding the impact of NSES on energy balance could be attributed to differences in defining the size and shape of a neighborhood [5] This issue [6] has been observed in analyses of NSES and the food environment [7] and is important to consider for understanding whether a true relationship between the neighborhood-level factor and behavioral outcome exists, or whether it is an artifact of how the neighborhood-level factor is defined

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