4.5 Article

FEAST: Empowering Community Residents to Use Technology to Assess and Advocate for Healthy Food Environments

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11524-017-0141-6

关键词

Food environment; Food access; Community-based participatory research; Mobile health; Urban health; Minority health; Advocacy; Food security; Aging

资金

  1. National Center for Research Resources
  2. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, National Institutes of Health (NIH) through the Stanford Office of Community Health (King, and Winter) [UL1RR025774]
  3. Get Healthy San Mateo County Implementation Funding
  4. US Public Health Service from the National Heart, Blood, and Lung Institute [5T32HL007034]
  5. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development's Building Interdisciplinary Research Careers in Women's Health (BIRCWH) [K12HD043451]
  6. US Public Health Service from the National Heart, Blood, and Lung Institute for this research [5T32HL007034]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Creating environments that support healthy eating is important for successful aging, particularly in light of the growing population of older adults in the United States. There is an urgent need to identify innovative upstream solutions to barriers experienced by older adults in accessing and buying healthy food. FEAST (Food Environment Assessment STudy) is an effort that is part of the global Our Voice initiative, which utilizes a combination of technology and community-engaged methods to empower citizen scientists (i.e., community residents) to: (1) use the Healthy Neighborhood Discovery Tool (Discovery Tool) mobile application to collect data (geocoded photos, audio narratives) about aspects of their environment that facilitate or hinder healthy living; and (2) use findings to advocate for change in partnership with local decision and policy makers. In FEAST, 23 racially/ethnically diverse, low-income, and food-insecure older adults residing in urban, North San Mateo County, CA, were recruited to use the Discovery Tool to examine factors that facilitated or hindered their access to food as well as their food-related behaviors. Participants collectively reviewed data retrieved from the Discovery Tool and identified and prioritized important, yet feasible, issues to address. Access to affordable healthy food and transportation were identified as the major barriers to eating healthfully and navigating their neighborhood food environments. Subsequently, participants were trained in advocacy skills and shared their findings with relevant decision and policymakers, who in turn dispelled myths and discussed and shared resources to address relevant community needs. Proximal and distal effects of the community-engaged process at 3, 6, 12, and 24 months were documented and revealed individual-, community-, and policy-level impacts. Finally, FEAST contributes to the evidence on multi-level challenges that low-income, racially/ethnically diverse older adults experience when accessing, choosing and buying healthy foods.

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