The Retail Food Environment, Store Foods, and Diet and Health among Indigenous Populations: a Scoping Review
Gabriella Luongo
1
,
Kelly Skinner
2
,
Breanna Phillipps
2
,
Ziwa Yu
3
,
Debbie Martin
4
,
Catherine L. Mah
1
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2020-08-11
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR: 3.044
CiteScore: 16.5
Impact factor: 11.0
ISSN: 21624968
PubMed ID:
32780322
General Medicine
Abstract
Describe the state of knowledge on how the retail food environment contributes to diet-related health and obesity among Indigenous populations, and assess how the literature incorporates Indigenous perspectives, methodologies and engagement throughout the research process. Outcomes included dietary behaviour (purchasing, intakes and diet quality) and diet-related health outcomes (weight-related outcomes, non-communicable diseases and holistic health or definitions of health as defined by Indigenous populations involved in the study). Of fifty included articles (1996–2019), the largest proportions described Indigenous communities in Canada (20 studies, 40%), the USA (16, 32%) and Australia (9, 18%). Among articles that specified the Indigenous population of focus (42 studies, 84%), the largest proportion (11 studies, 26%) took place in Inuit communities, followed by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities (8 studies, 19%). The included literature encompassed four main study designs: type A, dietary intakes of store foods (14 studies, 28%), and type B, store food environments (16, 32%), comprised the greatest proportion of articles; the remainder were type C, store food environments and diet (7, 14%), and type D, store food environment interventions (13, 26%). Of the studies that assessed diet or health outcomes (36, 72%), 22 (61%) assessed dietary intakes; 16 (44%) sales/purchasing; and 8 (22%) weight-related outcomes. Store foods tended to contribute the greatest amount of dietary energy to the diets of Indigenous peoples and increased non-communicable disease risk as compared to traditional foods. Multi-pronged interventions appeared to have positive impacts on dietary behaviours, food purchasing and nutrition knowledge; promotion and nutrition education alone had more mixed effects. Of the nine studies which were found to have strong engagement with Indigenous populations, eight had moderate or high methodological quality. Eighteen studies (36%) did not mention any engagement with Indigenous populations. The literature confirmed the importance of store foods to the total energy intake of the contemporary diets of Indigenous people, the gaps in accessing both retail food environments and traditional foods and the potential for both new dietary assessment research and retail food environment intervention strategies to better align with and privilege Indigenous Ways of Knowing.
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Total citations:
20
Citations from 2024:
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The most citing journal
Citations in journal:
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GOST
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Luongo G. et al. The Retail Food Environment, Store Foods, and Diet and Health among Indigenous Populations: a Scoping Review // Current obesity reports. 2020. Vol. 9. No. 3. pp. 288-306.
GOST all authors (up to 50)
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Luongo G., Skinner K., Phillipps B., Yu Z., Martin D., Mah C. L. The Retail Food Environment, Store Foods, and Diet and Health among Indigenous Populations: a Scoping Review // Current obesity reports. 2020. Vol. 9. No. 3. pp. 288-306.
Cite this
RIS
Copy
TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1007/s13679-020-00399-6
UR - https://doi.org/10.1007/s13679-020-00399-6
TI - The Retail Food Environment, Store Foods, and Diet and Health among Indigenous Populations: a Scoping Review
T2 - Current obesity reports
AU - Luongo, Gabriella
AU - Skinner, Kelly
AU - Phillipps, Breanna
AU - Yu, Ziwa
AU - Martin, Debbie
AU - Mah, Catherine L.
PY - 2020
DA - 2020/08/11
PB - Springer Nature
SP - 288-306
IS - 3
VL - 9
PMID - 32780322
SN - 2162-4968
ER -
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors)
Copy
@article{2020_Luongo,
author = {Gabriella Luongo and Kelly Skinner and Breanna Phillipps and Ziwa Yu and Debbie Martin and Catherine L. Mah},
title = {The Retail Food Environment, Store Foods, and Diet and Health among Indigenous Populations: a Scoping Review},
journal = {Current obesity reports},
year = {2020},
volume = {9},
publisher = {Springer Nature},
month = {aug},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1007/s13679-020-00399-6},
number = {3},
pages = {288--306},
doi = {10.1007/s13679-020-00399-6}
}
Cite this
MLA
Copy
Luongo, Gabriella, et al. “The Retail Food Environment, Store Foods, and Diet and Health among Indigenous Populations: a Scoping Review.” Current obesity reports, vol. 9, no. 3, Aug. 2020, pp. 288-306. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13679-020-00399-6.