Reducing Income Inequalities in Food Consumption Explorations With an Agent-Based Model
Authored by David J Blok, Vlas Sake J de, Roel Bakker, Lenthe Frank J van
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.amepre.2015.03.042
Sponsors:
Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development
Platforms:
MASON
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Introduction: Individual and environmental factors dynamically interact
in shaping income inequalities in healthy food consumption. The
agent-based model, Health Behaviors Simulation (HEBSIM), was developed
to describe income inequalities in healthy food consumption. It
simulates interactions between households and their environment. HEBSIM
was used to explore the impact of interventions aimed at reducing food
consumption inequalities.
Methods: HEBSIM includes households and food outlets. Households are
characterized by location, composition, income, and preference for food.
Decisions about where to shop for food (fruit/vegetable stores, supermarkets, or discount supermarkets) and whether to visit fast food
outlets are based on distance, price, and food preference. Food outlets
can close and new food outlets can enter the system. Three interventions
to reduce healthy food consumption inequalities were tested: (1)
eliminating residential segregation; (2) lowering the prices of healthy
food; and (3) providing health education. HEBSIM was quantified using
data from Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Eindhoven, and the GLOBE
study (2011).
Results: The model mimicked food consumption in Eindhoven. High-income
households visited healthy food shops more often than low-income
households. Eliminating residential segregation had the largest impact
in reducing income inequalities in food consumption, but resulted partly
from a worsening in healthy food consumption in high-income households.
Lowering prices and health education could also substantially reduce
inequalities. Most interventions took 5-10 years to reach their (almost)
full effects.
Conclusions: HEBSIM is a promising tool for studying dynamic
interactions between households and their environment and for assessing
the impact of interventions on income inequalities in food consumption.
(C) 2015 American Journal of Preventive Medicine
Tags
Simulation
Neighborhood
Public-health
Interventions
Environments
Adults
Socioeconomic inequalities
Vegetable consumption
Fruit
Adolescents