PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Urban poor plagued by 'burdens of place'

Urban poor plagued by 'burdens of place'
2012-08-09
(Press-News.org) EAST LANSING, Mich. — Most of America's urban cores were designed for walking but offer little in the way of supermarkets, healthy restaurants and other amenities for residents to walk to, according to a study led by a Michigan State University scholar.

The study is one of the first to show that poor residents living in declining urban neighborhoods want healthy food choices – evidenced by their willingness to travel long distances to find them. Past research has generally assumed that poor people will shop at whatever store is closest.

But compared with suburban residents, the urban poor are more overweight and must travel farther to find healthy food and access personal services, said Igor Vojnovic, associate professor of geography and lead author on the study.

"This research reveals that the lack of access to basic amenities in declining inner-city neighborhoods – what we call the 'burdens of place' – is an important variable in shaping travel and diet," Vojnovic said.

Vojnovic and colleagues studied the Lansing, Mich., area by surveying urban and suburban residents, collecting socioeconomic data and using digital mapping to plot average distances to stores, restaurants, doctors' offices, banks, skating rinks and other amenities.

Their findings, published in the Journal of Urban Design, found that poor urban residents were significantly overweight, with an average body mass index of 28.73, while wealthy suburbanites were only slightly overweight, with an average BMI of 25.05. (For adults, a BMI of 25 is considered overweight and 30 is obese.)

Other findings included: Fast food restaurants were more plentiful in poor neighborhoods. In addition, residents there reported that 55 percent of all dining-out experiences were at fast food eateries, compared with only 13 percent for those in the suburbs. Poor urban residents had to go nearly twice as far as suburbanites to shop at supermarkets. The urban poor made about five trips per month to convenience stores (which aren't known for stocking healthy foods) compared with only one trip per month for suburbanites.

"Even though the inner cities were designed to improve access, homeowners in the wealthier suburbs were actually closer to the stores and restaurants that offer healthier foods," Vojnovic said. "In other words, opportunities depend on where you live."

During the past 30 years, urban planners and business investors have largely ignored poor communities, instead focusing policy, research and investment efforts on wealthier neighborhoods, Vojnovic said. As a result, little is known about resident behaviors in declining communities, even as the number of poor people increases in the United States, he said.

The current study shows that the fundamental principles in city planning and design that have been developed around wealthy communities do not necessarily hold in poor neighborhoods.

Meanwhile, some have advocated an "obesity tax" on unhealthy foods to help pay for the health-care system overhaul or as a policy to curtail obesity. But Vojnovic said such a tax would disproportionately burden the urban poor and noted that this population has little power to influence the location decisions of healthy food suppliers.

Vojnovic said a better option might be for states to give subsidies to major supermarket chains, restaurants serving healthy food and other needed establishments that locate in poor neighborhoods.

INFORMATION:

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Urban poor plagued by 'burdens of place'

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Plenty of dark matter near the Sun

Plenty of dark matter near the Sun
2012-08-09
Dark matter was first proposed by the Swiss astronomer Fritz Zwicky in the 1930s. He found that clusters of galaxies were filled with a mysterious dark matter that kept them from flying apart. At nearly the same time, Jan Oort in the Netherlands discovered that the density of matter near the Sun was nearly twice what could be explained by the presence of stars and gas alone. In the intervening decades, astronomers developed a theory of dark matter and structure formation that explains the properties of clusters and galaxies in the Universe, but the amount of dark matter ...

Looking to Lose Weight?

2012-08-09
SHREWSBURY, MA – A new study published in Nutrition Journal shows that people can lose weight while consuming typical amounts of sugar or high fructose corn syrup (HFCS) if their overall caloric intake is reduced. "Our research debunks the vilification of high fructose corn syrup in the diet," said James M. Rippe, M.D., one of the study authors. "The results show that equally reduced-calorie diets caused similar weight loss regardless of the type or amount of added sugars. This lends further support to findings by our research group and others that table sugar and HFCS ...

89 million people medically uninsured during 2004 to 2007

2012-08-09
Eighty-nine million Americans were without health insurance for at least one month during the period from 2004 to 2007, and 23 million lost coverage more than once during that time, according to researchers at Penn State and Harvard University. "These findings call attention to the continuing instability and insecurity of health insurance in our country," said Pamela Farley Short, professor of health policy and administration, Penn State. "With more than a third of all Americans under age 65 being uninsured at some point in a four-year period, it's easy to see that the ...

He/she, him/her – a sign of women's place in society?

2012-08-09
Language use in books mirrors trends in gender equality over the generations in the US, according to a new study by Jean Twenge, from San Diego State University, and colleagues. Their work explores how the language in the full text of more than one million books reflects cultural change in U.S. women's status. The study is published online in Springer's journal Sex Roles. Twenge and colleagues, W. Keith Campbell and Brittany Gentile of the University of Georgia, examined whether the use of gendered pronouns such as 'he' and 'she' mirrored women's status between 1900-2008, ...

Retirement expert: Medicare woes mostly rooted in myth

Retirement expert: Medicare woes mostly rooted in myth
2012-08-09
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Various misconceptions surrounding the continued viability of Medicare can be debunked or discredited, making it more important than ever for voters and policymakers to fully understand the program's existing contours and limitations, according to a paper published by a University of Illinois expert on retirement benefits. Law professor Richard L. Kaplan says Medicare has become one of the most controversial federal programs for numerous reasons, but misinformation has played a key role in fostering criticism of it. "Medicare is an important and complicated ...

Banks' cash stash: No shield against bankruptcy

2012-08-09
According to theoretical physicists João da Cruz and Pedro Lind from Lisbon University, Portugal, imposing minimum capital levels for banks may not prevent the insolvency of a minority of banks from triggering a widespread banking system collapse. In a study recently published in EPJ B1, the researchers explain why this measure could instead lead to larger crises. The authors created a model of banks' behaviour to assess the conditions needed to avoid "avalanches" of insolvent banks. Their model is based on a physical system of particles representing how banks are attracted ...

Poorly-performing hand implants unacceptable says leading medical journal

2012-08-09
Los Angeles, CA (August 09, 2012) Poorly-performing medical implants have hit the headlines recently, and the trend looks set to continue: the September issue of the Journal of Hand Surgery (JHS) homes in on the unacceptable performance of hand implants for osteoarthritis patients. Citing several recent studies, the editorial asks why these implants – which perform worse that certain hip replacement implants now deemed unacceptable – are still widely used. JHS is an online and print, orthopedic surgery journal published by SAGE. The issue reports on a number of thumb ...

Eating grapes may help protect heart health in men with metabolic syndrome, new study suggests

2012-08-09
Fresno, Calif. – Consuming grapes may help protect heart health in people with metabolic syndrome, according to new research published in the Journal of Nutrition. Researchers observed a reduction in key risk factors for heart disease in men with metabolic syndrome: reduced blood pressure, improved blood flow and reduced inflammation. Natural components found in grapes, known as polyphenols, are thought to be responsible for these beneficial effects. The randomized, placebo-controlled, crossover study, led by principal investigator Dr. Maria Luz Fernandez and Jacqueline ...

Potential drug molecule shows enhanced anti-HIV activity

Potential drug molecule shows enhanced anti-HIV activity
2012-08-09
Researchers from Munich and Naples have shown that minimal modification of a synthetic peptide with anti-HIV activity results in a new compound with more than two orders of magnitude higher binding affinity to the chemokine receptor CXCR4 and greatly improved anti-HIV activity. This could be a step toward the design of new, more effective drugs against AIDS, inflammatory diseases, and some forms of cancer. Different strains of HIV-1 use either the chemokine receptor CCR5 or CXCR4 for entry into immune cells. While drugs that block usage of CCR5 by the virus are already ...

Carnegie Mellon study shows skin-aging radicals age naturally formed particles in the air

2012-08-09
PITTSBURGH—Pine trees are one of the biggest contributors to air pollution. They give off gases that react with airborne chemicals – many of which are produced by human activity – creating tiny, invisible particles that muddy the air. New research from a team led by Carnegie Mellon University's Neil Donahue shows that the biogenic particles formed from pine tree emissions are much more chemically interesting and dynamic than previously thought. The study provides the first experimental evidence that such compounds are chemically transformed by free radicals, the same compounds ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Ribosomal engineering creates “super-probiotic” bacteria

This self-powered eye tracker harnesses energy from blinking and is as comfortable as everyday glasses

Adverse prenatal exposures linked to higher rates of mental health issues, brain changes in adolescents

Restoring mitochondria shows promise for treating chronic nerve pain   

Nature study identifies a molecular switch that controls transitions between single-celled and multicellular forms

USU chemists' CRISPR discovery could lead to single diagnostic test for COVID, flu, RSV

Early hominins from Morocco reveal an African lineage near the root of Homo sapiens

Small chimps, big risks: What chimps show us about our own behavior

We finally know how the most common types of planets are created

Thirty-year risk of cardiovascular disease among healthy women according to clinical thresholds of lipoprotein(a)

Yoga for opioid withdrawal and autonomic regulation

Gene therapy ‘switch’ may offer non-addictive pain relief

Study shows your genes determine how fast your DNA mutates with age

Common brain parasite can infect your immune cells. Here's why that's probably OK

International experts connect infections and aging through cellular senescence

An AI–DFT integrated framework accelerates materials discovery and design

Twist to reshape, shift to transform: Bilayer structure enables multifunctional imaging

CUNY Graduate Center and its academic partners awarded more than $1M by Google.org to advance statewide AI education through the Empire AI consortium

Mount Sinai Health system receives $8.5 million NIH grant renewal to advance research on long-term outcomes in children with congenital heart disease

Researchers develop treatment for advanced prostate cancer that could eliminate severe side effects

Keck Medicine of USC names Christian Pass chief financial officer

Inflatable fabric robotic arm picks apples

MD Anderson and SOPHiA GENETICS announce strategic collaboration to accelerate AI-driven precision oncology

Oil residues can travel over 5,000 miles on ocean debris, study finds

Korea University researchers discover that cholesterol-lowering drug can overcome chemotherapy resistance in triple-negative breast cancer

Ushikuvirus: A newly discovered giant virus may offer clues to the origin of life

Boosting the cell’s own cleanup

Movement matters: Light activity led to better survival in diabetes, heart, kidney disease

Method developed to identify best treatment combinations for glioblastoma based on unique cellular targets

Self-guided behavioral app helps children with epilepsy sleep earlier

[Press-News.org] Urban poor plagued by 'burdens of place'