Obesogenicity perception of food environments in adults: A cross-sectional study in urban areas of Santiago, Chile.

IF 1.2 Q2 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL Medwave Pub Date : 2024-10-30 DOI:10.5867/medwave.2024.09.2769
Lorena Rodríguez Osiac, Daniel Egaña Rojas, Paulina Molina Carrasco, Rodrigo Villegas Ríos, Barbara Castillo Villalobos, Patricia Gálvez Espinoza
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Abstract

Introduction: In Chile, there is a high prevalence of obesity, and most people have an inadequate quality of food. Food environments can constitute barriers that prevent healthy food choices and lead to overweight and obesity, as well as diet-related non-communicable diseases. There are international instruments that allow the characterization of food environments. In Chile, there are no studies on the perception of food environments. This study aimed to characterize the perception of obesogenicity of food environments in the urban Chilean population using an instrument previously validated in Chile.

Methods: This is a cross-sectional study with probabilistic sampling. The "Perceived Nutrition Environment Measures Survey", based on the Chilean model of food environments, was applied to 256 participants from two urban communities of the Metropolitan Region. Scores were calculated for the instrument items, which allowed calculating scores by environments included in the Chilean model of Food Environments. Negative scores were related to a higher obesogenic level.

Results: The results show that the domestic food environment is perceived as less obesogenic (median of 15.8 points), with more than 90% of households having fruits, vegetables, and legumes, even though the supply food environment was negative (median -0.19 points). However, about 50% of households had ultra-processed foods. The street food environment was perceived as the most obesogenic (median -1.91 points), with more than 60% of the participants indicating difficulty finding healthy options.

Conclusions: According to the level of obesogenicity of the environments studied, it is necessary to have public policies that improve them and ensure the availability and physical and economic access to healthy food, particularly in the food supply and public road environments.

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成年人对食物环境致肥性的认知:智利圣地亚哥城区横断面研究。
导言:在智利,肥胖症的发病率很高,大多数人的食物质量不高。食物环境可能构成障碍,阻碍人们选择健康的食物,导致超重和肥胖,以及与饮食相关的非传染性疾病。有一些国际文书允许对食品环境进行定性。在智利,还没有关于食品环境感知的研究。本研究旨在利用之前在智利验证过的一种工具,描述智利城市人口对食物环境致肥胖性的感知特征:这是一项采用概率抽样的横断面研究。根据智利食品环境模型设计的 "感知营养环境测量调查 "适用于来自首都大区两个城市社区的 256 名参与者。通过计算工具项目的得分,可以按智利食品环境模型中包含的环境计算得分。负分与肥胖程度较高有关:结果表明,尽管供应食品环境为负分(中位数-0.19 分),但 90% 以上的家庭都有水果、蔬菜和豆类食品,因此认为家庭食品环境导致肥胖的程度较低(中位数为 15.8 分)。然而,约 50%的家庭拥有超加工食品。街头食品环境被认为最容易导致肥胖(中位数-1.91 分),超过 60% 的参与者表示很难找到健康的选择:根据所研究环境的致肥胖程度,有必要制定公共政策来改善这些环境,并确保健康食品的可获得性以及物质和经济上的可及性,尤其是在食品供应和公共道路环境方面。
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来源期刊
Medwave
Medwave MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL-
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
8.30%
发文量
50
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: Medwave is a peer-reviewed, biomedical and public health journal. Since its foundation in 2001 (Volume 1) it has always been an online only, open access publication that does not charge subscription or reader fees. Since January 2011 (Volume 11, Number 1), all articles are peer-reviewed. Without losing sight of the importance of evidence-based approach and methodological soundness, the journal accepts for publication articles that focus on providing updates for clinical practice, review and analysis articles on topics such as ethics, public health and health policy; clinical, social and economic health determinants; clinical and health research findings from all of the major disciplines of medicine, medical science and public health. The journal does not publish basic science manuscripts or experiments conducted on animals. Until March 2013, Medwave was publishing 11-12 numbers a year. Each issue would be posted on the homepage on day 1 of each month, except for Chile’s summer holiday when the issue would cover two months. Starting from April 2013, Medwave adopted the continuous mode of publication, which means that the copyedited accepted articles are posted on the journal’s homepage as they are ready. They are then collated in the respective issue and included in the Past Issues section.
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