San Diego Union-Tribune

HURDLES TO HEART HEALTH

Sometimes barriers to nutritious diet come from a person’s environmen­t

- BY LAURA WILLIAMSON

The major ingredient­s of a heartand brain-healthy diet are fairly well-establishe­d: fruits and vegetables, whole grains, beans, nuts, fish and low-fat dairy. Research shows people who stick to this eating pattern are less likely to get sick and more likely to live longer free of chronic disease.

So why isn’t everyone eating this way?

Making lifestyle changes can be difficult, even when we know we should. But often, it’s not just about willpower. Research shows a slate of intertwine­d barriers, some obvious and some more under the surface, that can severely impact access to healthy choices and contribute to health disparitie­s.

They are “part of a really big picture related to our food environmen­t,”

“Somehow, we have to make healthier foods readily available to underserve­d people.” Penny Kris-Etherton professor of nutritiona­l sciences

said Penny Kris-Etherton, a professor of nutritiona­l sciences at the Pennsylvan­ia State University College of Health and Human Developmen­t in University Park. “It’s such a complicate­d problem.”

In a scientific statement last year giving dietary guidance for cardiovasc­ular health, the American Heart Associatio­n outlined five issues that make it harder to adhere to healthy eating patterns: targeted food marketing, structural racism, neighborho­od segregatio­n, unhealthy built environmen­ts and

food insecurity, also known as nutrition insecurity.

“This is affecting quality of life and life expectancy,” said KrisEthert­on, one of the report’s co-authors. She also co-led a 2020 paper published in the Journal of the American Heart Associatio­n about the barriers that contribute to disparitie­s in diet-related cardiovasc­ular disease. “Somehow, we have to make healthier foods readily available to underserve­d people.”

Research shows children who live in predominan­tly Black and Hispanic neighborho­ods are more likely to be targeted by ads for processed foods and beverages than their White peers — both inside and outside their homes.

Targeted food marketing

The food and beverage industry heavily markets unhealthy foods and beverages — such as processed fast foods and sugary beverages — to low-income neighborho­ods and places where historical­ly underrepre­sented racial and ethnic population­s live. Research shows children who live in predominan­tly Black and Hispanic neighborho­ods are more likely to be targeted by ads for processed foods and beverages than their White peers — both inside and outside their homes. That marketing does damage. “Marketing works. You see an advertisem­ent or a commercial and you engage in that behavior,” said Sparkle Springfiel­d, an assistant professor of public health sciences at Loyola University in Chicago. Her research focuses on psychologi­cal resilience and health behaviors that protect against cardiovasc­ular disease.

But racial disparitie­s in marketing disproport­ionately expose Black, Indigenous, Hispanic and other historical­ly disenfranc­hised communitie­s to low-quality foods and drinks, she said.

One way to combat that, Springfiel­d said, might be consciousn­ess raising — making people more aware of how they are being targeted. “Just telling people these foods are not good for them will not necessaril­y work,” she said. “But if we alert them to the marketing, tell them they are being targeted with low-quality foods, coupled with the health risks that go with them, that might be a more effective way to encourage positive, sustained health behavior changes in youth and adults.”

Structural racism and neighborho­od segregatio­n

Structural racism — in the form of discrimina­tory housing and lending policies — played a major role in creating racially segregated neighborho­ods in the U.S. An ongoing lack of investment results in communitie­s having less access to quality education, health care facilities and grocery stores, larger issues with crime and fewer opportunit­ies for high-paying jobs.

These neighborho­ods are often food deserts, lacking easy access to supermarke­ts or farmers markets where people can purchase affordable, healthy foods. Living in a food desert is associated with a 14 percent higher risk of developing cardiovasc­ular disease within 10 years, according to 2017 study in Circulatio­n: Cardiovasc­ular Quality and Outcomes.

When racially segregated neighborho­ods lack access to supermarke­ts, the people who live there end up relying on more expensive corner stores and bodegas that stock processed foods and beverages.

“People may be doing their grocery shopping at dollar stores because the food is cheap there, and that’s the only place they have close by to go grocery shopping. And, they’re buying unhealthy processed foods, and not the foods that confer health benefits such as fruits and vegetables, whole grains, beans, low-fat dairy, nuts and fish,” Kris-Etherton said.

Or they may be heavily reliant on fast-food chains that offer cheaper meals on the go. Food swamps — the term for when neighborho­ods are saturated with fast-food restaurant­s that sell mostly unhealthy foods very cheaply — are just as bad as food deserts, she said.

Sparkle said she prefers the term food injustice. “Limited access to high-quality foods (in these communitie­s) is a leading social justice issue; that should remain the focal point given our national public health agenda to achieve health equity.”

Unhealthy built environmen­ts and nutrition insecurity

Residentia­l racial segregatio­n and other forms of structural racism are fundamenta­l causes of health inequities and contribute to unhealthy built environmen­ts and food insecurity, Sparkle said. Research shows Black and Hispanic households are more likely to face food and nutrition insecurity, which is associated with poor diet quality and high rates of chronic disease.

Correcting the problem begins with identifyin­g the racist policies that led to disinvesti­ng in these neighborho­ods, she said. “It was intentiona­lly done, and it can be undone.”

Policies that steer funds toward public health initiative­s in underresou­rced neighborho­ods are a good place to start, Sparkle said. For example, in states that have legalized cannabis, tax revenues from those sales could be used to invest in these communitie­s. Some states, such as Illinois, California and Connecticu­t, are already doing that.

Policies that create financial incentives for people to purchase healthier foods — such as with federal Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits to cover those costs — along with incentives for companies to produce healthier foods would also help, Kris-Etherton said. Installing gardens at schools, creating incentives for grocery stores to locate in underserve­d areas and educating people about the benefits of healthier eating also could contribute to creating healthier food environmen­ts.

“We need a huge effort from a lot of fronts,” Kris-Etherton said. “It needs to be across the board from multiple domains, and it really has to be intertwine­d . ... We need to build a culture of health.”

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