Who shops at their nearest grocery store? A cross-sectional exploration of disparities in geographic food access among a low-income, racially/ethnically diverse cohort in Central Texas.
Kathryn M JandaDeborah SalvoNalini RanjitDeanna M HoelscherAida NielsenPablo LemoineJoy CasnovskyAlexandra van den BergPublished in: Journal of hunger & environmental nutrition (2022)
We examined whether Central Texans shop at their nearest supermarket, how far they travel for groceries, and explored differences by race/ethnicity, urbanicity, motivations for store selection and other demographic characteristics. Using cross-sectional data and GIS, continuous network distances from participants' homes to nearest and usual supermarkets were calculated and multivariate linear regression assessed differences. <19% shopped at their nearest supermarket. Regression models found that urbanicity played a large role in distance traveled to preferred supermarket, but other factors varied by race/ethnicity. Our findings demonstrate racial/ethnic and urbanicity disparities in food access and multiple domains of food access need greater consideration.