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Stores with
healthy, low-cost foods less plentiful in
Rural areas
Newswise — People who want to adopt healthy
lifestyles often are at a disadvantage if
they live in rural areas where stores
offering nutritious foods at a lower cost
are few and far between.
A study by the University of South
Carolina’s Arnold School of Public Health
examined the “nutritional environment” of a
rural county to determine the number and
types of food stores, the availability of
stores and the price of a specific list of
staple foods representing the main food
groups.
Researchers selected Orangeburg County in
South Carolina for the study. The rural
county, which covers 1,106 square miles, has
a population of more than 91,500 people, of
whom 63 percent are minority.
“Stores offering more healthful and
lower-cost food selections were greatly
outnumbered by convenience stores, which
offered fewer healthy foods,” said Dr.
Angela Liese, an associate professor at the
Arnold School and the study’s lead author.
“Very little is known about the nutritional
environment of rural areas, but 20 percent
of Americans live in rural areas,” she said.
“Our findings underscore the challenges that
rural residents encounter when they want to
adopt healthier lifestyles.”
The study is one of the first in the nation
to look at store choices in rural areas. The
results are published in the November issue
of the Journal of the American Dietetic
Association.
Of the 77 stores located in Orangeburg
County at the time of the 2004 study, only
16 percent were supermarkets, and 10 percent
were grocery stores. The remaining 74
percent of the stores were convenience
stores. Supermarkets were defined as stores
with more than $2 million in sales annually
and usually belonged to large chains;
grocery stores were defined as stores having
less than $2 million in annual sales and
were generally smaller than supermarkets.
The county had seven stores per 100 square
miles and eight stores per 10,000 residents.
Healthy foods were abundant in the
supermarkets and grocery stores if
available, were more expensive at the
convenience stores.
Among the findings:
• Only 4 percent of convenience stores
carried high-fiber bread;
• Only 28 percent of any of the stores sold
any of the fruits or vegetables listed on
the survey – apples, cucumbers, oranges and
tomatoes.
• Only 2 percent of convenience stores
carried low-fat or skim milk;
• Eggs were available in 29 percent of
convenience stores, and none of these stores
carried ground beef (lean or high fat),
chicken drumsticks or chicken breasts;
• 98 percent of convenience stores had
off-street parking and only 36 percent
offered handicap parking;
• Food stamps were accepted by all the
supermarkets, 63 percent of the grocery
stores and 2 percent of the convenience
stores.
The Arnold School study follows a report
that the Los Angeles City Council, concerned
about the possible link between obesity and
fast-food restaurants, was considering a
moratorium on the building of new
restaurants in south Los Angeles while city
planners looked at ways of attracting
businesses with a greater variety of food
choices.
“We clearly are seeing a move in this
country to better understand how
availability and costs of certain foods
affect people’s choices,” Liese said.
“Knowing the nutritional environment of a
community may be important in how we help
the people living there make better choices
for their health.”
Although the Dietary Guidelines for
Americans are intended for all U.S
residents, Liese said that people living in
rural areas are at a marked disadvantage in
being able to meet these guidelines.
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