Abstract

There is limited evidence on food environment in low and middle-income countries (LMICs) and the application of food environment frameworks and associated metrics in such settings. Our study examines how food environment varies across an urban-peri-urban-rural gradient from three sites in North Viet Nam and its relationship with child undernutrition status and household consumption of processed food. By comparing three food environments, we present a picture of the food environment in a typical emerging economy with specific features such as non-market food sources (own production and food transfers) and dominance of the informal retail sector. We combined quantitative data (static geospatial data at neighborhood level and household survey) and qualitative data (in-depth interviews with shoppers). We found that across the three study sites, traditional open and street markets remain the most important outlets for respondents. Contrary to the common concern that urban households are the major consumers of processed foods, peri-urban and rural areas on average had higher consumption of ultra-processed foods than in urban areas. The low price levels of processed foods and the presence of processed foods even among the traditional convenience stores, those in closest proximity to the rural households, offer potential explanations of this result. Regarding undernutrition, low retail diversity and a household’s dependence on own production have important implications for the high prevalence of child undernutrition in rural areas. Our findings add to the current discussion on the critical role of the food environment on nutrition, such as the potential link between economic marginalization and access to food, and the role of food supply channels in consumption of processed foods.

Highlights

  • Countries across the world are still facing immense challenges in ensuring food and nutrition security, despite substantial progress in reducing hunger and undernutrition in the past decades [1]

  • To fight different forms of malnutrition, the central role of the food environment has been highlighted in several recent international reports [1,2,3], especially because food systems are essential to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), especially SDG2—zero hunger [4]

  • To identify potential food environment factors that play a key role in consumption and nutrition outcomes, we focused on two main outcome variables: under-five child undernutrition status and household consumption of processed food

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Summary

Introduction

Countries across the world are still facing immense challenges in ensuring food and nutrition security, despite substantial progress in reducing hunger and undernutrition in the past decades [1]. Food environment research gained momentum in recent years within high-income countries (HICs) in response to the high prevalence of overweight, obesity and noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) [6,7,8]. As low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) are fighting multiple burdens of malnutrition, characterized by the coexistence of undernutrition along with overweight and obesity [9,10], the food environment is gaining policy attention in such contexts [11]. The number of studies on food environment in LMICs is still limited compared with that for high income countries. Even though the number of publications on the food environment in LMICs is increasing, they predominantly feature upper-middle-income countries and outcomes related to overweight and obesity [12]

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