Journal article
Fruit and vegetable purchasing and the relative density of healthy and unhealthy food stores: Evidence from an Australian multilevel study
KE Mason, RJ Bentley, AM Kavanagh
Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health | BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP | Published : 2013
Abstract
Background: Evidence of a relationship between residential retail food environments and diet-related outcomes is inconsistent. One reason for this may be that food environments are typically defined in terms of the absolute number of particular store types in an area, whereas a measure of the relative number of healthy and unhealthy stores may be more appropriate. Methods: Using cross-sectional data from the VicLANES study conducted in Melbourne, Australia, multilevel logistic regression analysis was used to estimate the independent associations between absolute measures (numbers of healthy and unhealthy stores) and a relative measure (relative density of healthy stores) of the food environm..
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Funding Acknowledgements
VicLANES was supported by a grant from the Victorian Health Promotion Foundation (VicHealth).