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Afood swamp is an urban environment with few grocery stores but several non-nutritious food options such as corner stores orfast-food restaurants.
The concept is comparable to that of afood desert. It is generally believed that those in a food desert have poor local access to nutritious food sources, while those in a food swamp have easy local access to non-nutritious food.[1] However, areas that are considered food swamps can have adequate access to healthy food options while still having an overwhelming amount of unhealthy food available.[2]
One definition gives a general ratio of four unhealthy options for each healthy option.[3] The term was first coined by researchers conducting longitudinal studies of the link between increased access to grocery stores and rising obesity rates.[4] This study found that even with new access to local grocery stores, the proportion of convenience stores and fast food to a single grocery store did not shift food choices nor obesity rates. This indicates a distinction between food swamps and food deserts.
According to researchers, food swamps are better measures for obesity rates.[5] One of the factors that may better explain this phenomenon is the surrounding neighborhood of a food swamp; researchers found that a large portion of the community do not use public transportation as their primary commute. This means that food options are still severely limited, especially when the nearest convenience store, bodega, or fast food restaurant is at walking distance and consumes the least amount of time. Differential barriers of low-income communities are mentioned as important influences on food swamp characterization.[5]
Food swamps have positive, statistically significant effects on adultobesity rates, especially in areas where a majority of residents do not have access to personal or public transportation, and have disproportionate health impact on low-income minorities.[5]This environment is found in areas with strong corporate or industrial influence and is becoming a global phenomenon.[6] Research also suggests a positive correlation betweenobesity rates and the ratio of unhealthy to healthy food options.[3] This is a consequence of fast-food options available in food swamps containing a high number ofcalories but a lower number ofnutrients.[5] Some data also suggests that young adults living in close proximity to fast-food restaurants demonstrated higher incidence oftype 2 diabetes.[6] This effect on obesity rates has reportedly been associated to higher obesity-relatedcancer mortality rates.[7]
Out of 12 conducted studies, the results of 10 provided evidence that in the US fast-food restaurants are more likely to be located in areas with higher concentrations of ethnic minorities than whites.[5] Racial-ethnic and low-income minorities were shown to more frequently reside near unhealthy fast-food retailers than others.[5] This suggests that racial-ethnic low-income minorities are more likely to experience the detrimental health effects of food swamps, which is supported by the fact that African Americans and Latinos have higher obesity rates than whites.[3]
The term “food swamp” has endured some criticism on account of its referral towetlands with a negative connotation.[6] Critics have raised the point that while swamps have positive influences onecosystems such as by detoxifying water and supportingbiodiversity, food swamps exclusively cause problems for human health and the environment.[6]
To eliminate food swamps, researchers have proposed introducing policies which limit the amount of fast-food establishments and incentivize the distribution of healthy food options in an area.[5]To resolve the issues caused by food swamps, researchers have suggested thatlocal governments should introduce policies such as new zoning laws that limit the number of possible unhealthy food outlets and incentivize the presence of healthy food retailers.[5] Lowering obesity rates is not dependent on the elimination of fast-food options but rather a more equal rate of unhealthy to healthy food options.[5] It has also been suggested that having morecommunity gardens and walkable neighborhoods could address this phenomenon.[7]
The Food Trust is an American nonprofit group that works to eliminate food swamps by ensuring access to food that is affordable and nutritious as well as by supporting programs which encourage SNAP recipients to buy healthy food.[8]