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Support policies that foster a healthy food environment and incentivize healthy food purchases to mitigate cancer inequities.

Patricia G WolfJennifer C Sanchez-FlackJoanna BuscemiMarian L FitzgibbonH Rex GaskinsJason M RidlonSage KimLisa M Tussing-Humphreys
Published in: Translational behavioral medicine (2021)
The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the inequitable access to resources, leading to a disproportionate burden of disease in vulnerable communities in the USA. However, these inequities in health outcomes are not limited to COVID-19. Approximately 18% of cancers are related to dietary behaviors and excess body weight. Underserved communities, such as minority racial/ethnic groups living in neighborhoods of low socioeconomic status, experience barriers to healthy eating including lack of access to high-quality healthy foods and higher availability of unhealthy foods and beverages in local retail food outlets. Strikingly, these same populations are more likely to die from cancers related to dietary intake and obesity like colorectal, liver, and pancreatic cancers. To reduce cancer inequities, policy makers can act by supporting programs that incentivize healthy food purchases and improve the local food environment in underserved communities.
Keyphrases
  • body weight
  • public health
  • papillary thyroid
  • human health
  • weight loss
  • sars cov
  • metabolic syndrome
  • type diabetes
  • coronavirus disease
  • mental health
  • childhood cancer
  • adipose tissue
  • skeletal muscle
  • young adults