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Citation

Busse, Kyle R.; Logendran, Rasheca; Owuor, Mercy; Omala, Hillary; Nandoya, Erick; Ammerman, Alice S.; & Martin, Stephanie L. (2023). Food Vendors and the Obesogenic Food Environment of an Informal Settlement in Nairobi, Kenya: a Descriptive and Spatial Analysis. Journal of Urban Health, 100(1), 76-87. PMCID: PMC9918652

Abstract

Food environments of urban informal settlements are likely drivers of dietary intake among residents of such settlements. Yet, few attempts have been made to describe them. The objective of this study was to characterize the food environment of a densely-populated informal settlement in Nairobi, Kenya according to the obesogenic properties and spatial distribution of its food vendors. In July-August 2019, we identified food vendors in the settlement and classified them into obesogenic risk categories based on the types of food that they sold. We calculated descriptive statistics and assessed clustering according to obesogenic risk using Ripley's K function. Foods most commonly sold among the 456 vendors in the analytic sample were sweets/confectionary (29% of vendors), raw vegetables (28%), fried starches (23%), and fruits (21%). Forty-four percent of vendors were classified as low-risk, protective; 34% as high-risk, non-protective; 16% as low-risk, non-protective; and 6% as high-risk, protective. The mean distance (95% confidence interval) to the nearest vendor of the same obesogenic risk category was 26 m (21, 31) for vendors in the low-risk, protective group; 29 m (25, 33) in the high-risk, non-protective group; 114 m (88, 139) in the high-risk, protective group; and 43 m (30, 56) in the low-risk, non-protective group. Clustering was significant for all obesogenic risk groups except for the high-risk, protective. Our findings indicate a duality of obesogenic and anti-obesogenic foods in this environment. Clustering of obesogenic foods highlights the need for local officials to take action to increase access to health-promoting foods throughout informal settlements.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11524-022-00687-7

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2023

Journal Title

Journal of Urban Health

Author(s)

Busse, Kyle R.
Logendran, Rasheca
Owuor, Mercy
Omala, Hillary
Nandoya, Erick
Ammerman, Alice S.
Martin, Stephanie L.

Article Type

Regular

PMCID

PMC9918652

Continent/Country

Kenya

ORCiD

Martin, S. - 0000-0002-0378-802X