Understanding Out-of-Home Food Environment, Family Restaurant Choices, and Childhood Obesity with an Agent-Based Huff Model
Authored by Yingru Li, Ting Du, Jian Peng
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.3390/su10051575
Sponsors:
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Platforms:
ArcGIS
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
Out-of-home eating plays an increasingly important role in the American
diet and weight. This research studied out-of-home food environment and
restaurant choices in one rural county of eastern Alabama, United
States, and examined the impact on African American children's weight
status. A mixed methods approach was used in this study. Questionnaires
were collected for 613 African American children at all four public
elementary schools in the county. The healthfulness of restaurants was
assessed with the Nutrition Environment Measures Survey-Restaurant
(NEMS-R). An agent-based model integrated with Huff's model was
developed in order to examine family dining patterns with consideration
for individual and community socio-demographics; restaurant location,
size, and healthfulness; and the spatial dynamics between consumers and
food retailers. We found that this model performed well, as evidenced by
validation with the 2013-2014 National Health and Nutrition Examination
Survey (p, 0.54-0.96), and by comparison with the original Huff model.
Frequency of dining at low-quality full-service restaurants (r = 0.084;
p <0.05) was associated with rural children's body mass index (BMI)
percentile. These findings may increase public awareness of the
importance of family restaurant choices as well as the potential
unhealthiness of full-service restaurants.
Tags
behavior
Neighborhood
Children
Consumption
Stores
Social-influence
Out-of-home food environment
Family restaurant choices
Childhood
obesity
Rural african american
Agent-based huff model
Dietary-intake
Weight status
Energy-intake
Healthy
menu