Abstract

An unhealthy diet is a major risk factor for chronic diseases including cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and cancer1–4. Limited access to healthy food options may contribute to unhealthy diets5,6. Studying diets is challenging, typically restricted to small sample sizes, single locations, and non-uniform design across studies, and has led to mixed results on the impact of the food environment7–23. Here we leverage smartphones to track diet health, operationalized through the self-reported consumption of fresh fruits and vegetables, fast food and soda, as well as body-mass index status in a country-wide observational study of 1,164,926 U.S. participants (MyFitnessPal app users) and 2.3 billion food entries to study the independent contributions of fast food and grocery store access, income and education to diet health outcomes. This study constitutes the largest nationwide study examining the relationship between the food environment and diet to date. We find that higher access to grocery stores, lower access to fast food, higher income and college education are independently associated with higher consumption of fresh fruits and vegetables, lower consumption of fast food and soda, and lower likelihood of being affected by overweight and obesity. However, these associations vary significantly across zip codes with predominantly Black, Hispanic or white populations. For instance, high grocery store access has a significantly larger association with higher fruit and vegetable consumption in zip codes with predominantly Hispanic populations (7.4% difference) and Black populations (10.2% difference) in contrast to zip codes with predominantly white populations (1.7% difference). Policy targeted at improving food access, income and education may increase healthy eating, but intervention allocation may need to be optimized for specific subpopulations and locations.

Highlights

  • Within zip codes with predominantly Hispanic populations, higher income was not associated with lower likelihood of B

  • While many of our results were consistent with previous studies[47,48,49], importantly, we found that zip codes with higher proportion of people with high educational attainment had the largest relative difference in the likelihood of BMI levels categorized as overweight or obesity (13.1% lower)

  • When we restricted our analyses to zip codes with predominantly Black, Hispanic, and non-Hispanic white populations, we found the independent associations of food access, income and educational attainment with food consumption and BMI status varied significantly across these three groups

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Summary

Methods

We conducted a United States countrywide crosssectional study of participants’ self-reported food intake and BMI in relation to zip code level demographic (educational attainment, ethnicity), socioeconomic (income), and food environment factors (grocery store and fast food access) by combining datasets from MFP, US Census, USDA and Yelp. Overall, this cross-sectional matching-based study analyzed 2.3 billion food intake logs from U.S smartphone participants over 7 years across 9822 zip codes, which is 24% of overall USA zip codes (U.S has a total of 41,692 zip codes).

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