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A Multi-Pronged Evaluation of a Healthy Food Access Initiative in Central Texas: Study Design, Methods, and Baseline Findings of the FRESH-Austin Evaluation Study

Kathryn M. Janda, Nalini Ranjit, Deborah Salvo, Aida Nielsen, Nika Akhavan, Martha Nelly León Díaz, Pablo Lemoine, Joy Casnovsky, Alexandra van den Berg

2021International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Food insecurity and limited healthy food access are complex public health issues and warrant multi-level evaluations. The purpose of this paper was to present the overall study design and baseline results of the multi-pronged evaluation of a healthy food access (i.e., Fresh for Less (FFL)) initiative in Central Texas. The 2018–2021 FRESH-Austin study was a natural experiment that utilized a cluster random sampling strategy to recruit three groups of participants (total n = 400): (1) customers at FFL assets, (2) residents that lived within 1.5 miles of an FFL asset, and (3) residents from a comparison community. Evaluation measures included annual cohort surveys, accelerometers and GPS devices, store-level audits, and built environment assessments. Data are being used to inform and validate an agent-based model (ABM) to predict food shopping and consumption behaviors. Sociodemographic factors and food shopping and consumption behaviors were similar across the three groups; however, customers recruited at FFL assets were lower income and had a higher prevalence of food insecurity. The baseline findings demonstrate the need for multi-level food access interventions, such as FFL, in low-income communities. In the future, ABM can be used as a cost-effective way to determine potential impacts of future large-scale food environment programs and policies.

Topics & Concepts

Baseline (sea)Environmental healthPsychological interventionConsumption (sociology)Food insecurityAuditPublic healthMedicineBusinessHealthy foodScale (ratio)Asset (computer security)Food securityGerontologyGeographyNursingComputer securityGeologyCartographyOceanographySocial scienceAccountingFood scienceSociologyAgricultureComputer scienceArchaeologyChemistryFood Security and Health in Diverse PopulationsObesity, Physical Activity, DietUrban Agriculture and Sustainability
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