Views
Graph
Explorer
Focus
Down
Load 1 level
Load 2 levels
Load 3 levels
Load 4 levels
Load all levels
All
Dagre
Focus
Down
Load 1 level
Load 2 levels
Load 3 levels
Load 4 level
Load all levels
All
Tree
SpaceTree
Focus
Expanding
Load 1 level
Load 2 levels
Load 3 levels
Down
All
Down
Radial
Focus
Expanding
Load 1 level
Load 2 levels
Load 3 levels
Down
All
Down
Box
Focus
Expanding
Down
Up
All
Down
Page ✓
Article
Outline
Document
Down
All
Canvas
Time
Timeline
Calendar
Request email digest
Past 24 hours
Past 2 days
Past 3 days
Past week
Add
Add page
Add comment
Add citation
Edit
Edit page
Delete page
Share
Link
Bookmark
Embed
Social media
Login
Member login
Register now for a free account
🔎
Eliminate food deserts
How
1
#366546
A ‘food desert’ is an area in which there is limited local availability of healthy food.
CONTEXT
(Help)
-
Tackling obesity in the UK »
Tackling obesity in the UK
Tackling obesity in the UK☜With concern growing that the Foresight analysis—that 50% of the UK population could be obese by 2050, at an annual cost to the nation of around £50 billion per year [2]—substantially underestimates the scale of the unfolding obesity crisis, the College of Contemporary Health is working with the wider policy community to develop a whole systems map of the obesity crisis and the potential responses.☜F1CEB7
▲
Tackling obesity »
Tackling obesity
Tackling obesity☜Many policy interventions have been suggested to address the obesity crisis across multiple studies—and indeed many such measures have been implemented, and are being implemented, now. Theres recognition too that these interventions need to be part of a coherent and comprehensive whole systems strategy [4]; with some grounds for optimism that such an approach has the potential to accomplish a significant reduction in the prevalence of obesity in the UK across the next decade. [2]☜5CA4D9
▲
Reshape the food environment to encourage healthier eating patterns »
Reshape the food environment to encourage healthier eating patterns
Reshape the food environment to encourage healthier eating patterns☜Create an environment that better suits our biology and supports us in developing and sustaining healthy eating and activity habits. Aim to amplify patterns that promote and support healthy eating patterns and damp patterns that encourage unhealthy eating patterns.☜5CA4D9
■
Eliminate food deserts
Eliminate food deserts☜A ‘food desert’ is an area in which there is limited local availability of healthy food. ☜5CA4D9
Heading
Summary
Click the button to enter task scheduling information
Open
Details
Enter task details
Message text
Select assignee(s)
Due date (click calendar)
RadDatePicker
RadDatePicker
Open the calendar popup.
Calendar
Title and navigation
Title and navigation
<<
<
November 2024
>
<<
November 2024
S
M
T
W
T
F
S
44
27
28
29
30
31
1
2
45
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
46
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
47
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
48
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
49
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Reminder
No reminder
1 day before due
2 days before due
3 days before due
1 week before due
Ready to post
Copy to text
Enter
Cancel
Task assignment(s) have been emailed and cannot now be altered
Lock
Cancel
Save
Comment graphing options
Choose comments:
Comment only
Whole thread
All comments
Choose location:
To a new map
To this map
New map options
Select map ontology
Options
Standard (default) ontology
College debate ontology
Hypothesis ontology
Influence diagram ontology
Story ontology
Graph to private map
Cancel
Proceed
+Comments (
0
)
- Comments
Add a comment
Newest first
Oldest first
Show threads
+Citations (
5
)
- Citations
Add new citation
List by:
Citerank
Map
Link
[1]
Mapping Food Poverty and Food Deserts in Greater Manchester
Author:
Andy Rawling
Publication info:
2012 March
Cited by:
David Price
9:58 PM 10 January 2015 GMT
Citerank:
(1)
399583
Eliminate food deserts
A ‘food desert’ is an area in which there is limited local availability of healthy food.
56
5CA4D9
URL:
http://www.gmcvo.org.uk/sites/gmcvo.org.uk/files/Mapping%20Food%20Poverty%20and%20Food%20Deserts%20in%20Greater%20Manchesterv6.pdf
Excerpt / Summary
In the majority of cases, initial feedback revealed little amount of awareness of the issue of food poverty / food deserts. Whilst concern for issues such as obesity and the need to eat ‘five a day’ figured highly, awareness of food poverty / food deserts appeared to be less widespread. The issue was further complicated by the varying definitions and / or perceptions of what constituted food poverty. For example, one contact regarded food poverty as being the lack of nutrients in a person’s diet, whereas others defined it as lack of access to healthy food. Nevertheless, in the areas where awareness of food poverty / food deserts was high, the issue is being investigated / researched in a robust and thorough manner.
Link
[2]
Food Deserts' in British Cities: Policy Context and Research Priorities
Author:
Neil Wrigley
Publication info:
2002, Urban Stud October 2002 vol. 39 no. 11 2029-2040
Cited by:
David Price
10:00 PM 10 January 2015 GMT
Citerank:
(1)
399583
Eliminate food deserts
A ‘food desert’ is an area in which there is limited local availability of healthy food.
56
5CA4D9
URL:
http://usj.sagepub.com/content/39/11/2029.abstract
Excerpt / Summary
This paper provides an introduction to the 'food deserts' theme by outlining how the problem of access to food, particularly foods integral to a healthy diet, for low-income households in poor neighbourhoods in British cities, became an increasingly important issue in the social exclusion and health inequalities debates, during the late 1990s. It documents the emergence of a policy response by UK government to this issue and the way in which policy development ran somewhat ahead of systematic research on key facets of the problem. The paper outlines the research priorities which became apparent by the end of the 1990s and some of the projects which have been funded by the UK research councils and by government departments and agencies to meet this need for fundamental research.
Link
[3]
Food poverty in London
Author:
London Assembly
Publication info:
2012
Cited by:
David Price
10:03 PM 10 January 2015 GMT
Citerank:
(1)
399583
Eliminate food deserts
A ‘food desert’ is an area in which there is limited local availability of healthy food.
56
5CA4D9
URL:
http://www.london.gov.uk/sites/default/files/Food%20poverty_Call%20for%20views%20and%20information_0.pdf
Link
[4]
Britain’s Towns & Village are Becoming Food Deserts
Author:
Hillary Shaw - 2007 December, 7
Cited by:
David Price
10:05 PM 10 January 2015 GMT
Citerank:
(1)
399583
Eliminate food deserts
A ‘food desert’ is an area in which there is limited local availability of healthy food.
56
5CA4D9
URL:
http://www.harper-adams.ac.uk/news/2816/britains-towns--village-are-becoming-food-deserts#.VLGhpWSsXu8
Excerpt / Summary
National research conducted by Harper Adams University College, Shropshire has identified that many areas in the UK have become ‘Food Deserts’. By mapping the location of supermarkets and smaller grocery stores and determining whether they stocked ten or more different types of fruit and vegetable Dr Hillary Shaw, Senior Lecturer at the University College has identified a trend which has proven negative dietary, health and economic implications for local residents.
Food deserts have been described as areas where people experience physical and economic barriers to accessing healthy food. Everyone should have access to healthy foods such as fresh fruit and vegetables, however, this is not always the case and a food desert can quickly develop. It is recommended that residents should not have to walk any more than 500m to a shop that sells healthy foods. In many cases Dr Shaw’s research identified that there are stores but they sell little or no fresh food.
Link
[5]
Food deserts: If you build it, they may not come
Author:
The Economist
Publication info:
2011, July 7
Cited by:
David Price
10:09 PM 10 January 2015 GMT
Citerank:
(1)
399583
Eliminate food deserts
A ‘food desert’ is an area in which there is limited local availability of healthy food.
56
5CA4D9
URL:
http://www.economist.com/node/18929190
Excerpt / Summary
...neither USDA nor the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies has been able to establish a causal link between food deserts and dietary health. In fact, both agree that merely improving access to healthy food does not change consumer behaviour. Open a full-service supermarket in a food desert and shoppers tend to buy the same artery-clogging junk food as before—they just pay less for it.
The unpalatable truth seems to be that some Americans simply do not care to eat a balanced diet, while others, increasingly, cannot afford to. Over the last four years, the price of the healthiest foods has increased at around twice the rate of energy-dense junk food. That is the whole problem, in an organic nutshell.
+About
- About
Entered by:-
David Price
NodeID:
#366546
Node type:
How
Entry date (GMT):
11/25/2014 3:36:00 PM
Last edit date (GMT):
1/10/2015 10:15:00 PM
Show other editors
Incoming cross-relations:
0
Outgoing cross-relations:
0
Average rating:
1
by
1
users
x
Select file to upload