Geographic scale matters in detecting the relationship between neighbourhood food environments and obesity risk: an analysis of driver license records in Salt Lake County, Utah

BMJ Open. 2014 Aug 19;4(8):e005458. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005458.

Abstract

Objectives: Empirical studies of the association between neighbourhood food environments and individual obesity risk have found mixed results. One possible cause of these mixed findings is the variation in neighbourhood geographic scale used. The purpose of this paper was to examine how various neighbourhood geographic scales affected the estimated relationship between food environments and obesity risk.

Design: Cross-sectional secondary data analysis.

Setting: Salt Lake County, Utah, USA.

Participants: 403,305 Salt Lake County adults 25-64 in the Utah driver license database between 1995 and 2008.

Analysis: Utah driver license data were geo-linked to 2000 US Census data and Dun & Bradstreet business data. Food outlets were classified into the categories of large grocery stores, convenience stores, limited-service restaurants and full-service restaurants, and measured at four neighbourhood geographic scales: Census block group, Census tract, ZIP code and a 1 km buffer around the resident's house. These measures were regressed on individual obesity status using multilevel random intercept regressions.

Outcome: Obesity.

Results: Food environment was important for obesity but the scale of the relevant neighbourhood differs for different type of outlets: large grocery stores were not significant at all four geographic scales, limited-service restaurants at the medium-to-large scale (Census tract or larger) and convenience stores and full-service restaurants at the smallest scale (Census tract or smaller).

Conclusions: The choice of neighbourhood geographic scale can affect the estimated significance of the association between neighbourhood food environments and individual obesity risk. However, variations in geographic scale alone do not explain the mixed findings in the literature. If researchers are constrained to use one geographic scale with multiple categories of food outlets, using Census tract or 1 km buffer as the neighbourhood geographic unit is likely to allow researchers to detect most significant relationships.

Keywords: PREVENTIVE MEDICINE; PUBLIC HEALTH; SOCIAL MEDICINE.

Publication types

  • Research Support, American Recovery and Reinvestment Act
  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Body Mass Index
  • Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Environment
  • Epidemiologic Methods
  • Fast Foods / supply & distribution
  • Female
  • Food Supply / statistics & numerical data*
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Obesity / epidemiology*
  • Residence Characteristics / statistics & numerical data*
  • Restaurants / statistics & numerical data
  • Utah / epidemiology