Associations of Food Outlet Densities with Obesity Measures Identify Fish and Chip Shops as a Uniquely Important Problem

Ahmad Albalawi, Catherine Hambly, John Speakman* (Corresponding Author)

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Citations (Scopus)
7 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Increases in the number of food outlets have been proposed as a key factor driving obesity. This study aimed to investigate the association between the densities of food establishments serving meals (excluding supermarkets and grocery stores), with body mass index (BMI), waist to hip ratio (WHR) and percentage of body fat among middle-aged adults in the UK. BMIs, WHR, %fat and socioeconomic factors were obtained from 456,079 individuals from the UK Biobank and averaged across 923 postcode districts (PD). The number of Fast-Food Restaurants (FFRs), Full-Service Restaurants (FSRs), delivery shops, takeaways, fish and chip shops, pubs and cafes were also obtained for each PD. We adjusted the obesity measures for deprivation level, education, employment, ethnicity, household size, household income and age. After adjustment, the density of fish and chip shops (per 1000 population) was positively associated with BMI and %fat for both sexes (males: BMI converted (exponentiated coefficient) β = 0.5, R2 = 4.14%, p < 0.0001; %fat converted β = 0.8, R2 = 3.32%, p < 0.0001; females: BMI converted β = 0.9, R2 = 5.31%, p < 0.0001; %fat converted β= 1.4 R2 = 4.65%, p < 0.0001). The densities of FFRs and delivery shops (per 1000 population) were not related to the adjusted obesity measures among males and females, except BMI in males where FFRs were significantly negatively associated. The densities (per 1000 population) of FSRs, pubs, cafes and total food outlets were all significantly inversely related to the obesity measures for both sexes. The number of fish and chip shops per 1000 individuals was significantly positively associated with obesity in middle-aged adults in the UK. A negative association between the other types of food outlet densities and the measures of obesity suggests access to such establishments is not a major driver of obesity. This is potentially because the food supplied at such establishments is not significantly less healthy than what is eaten elsewhere including at home (and may even be better). Paying attention only to fast food and/or full-service restaurants in intervention policy will likely not be effective. Policy intervention should potentially focus on the numbers of fish and chip shops and the deep-fried food served in such restaurants.

Original languageEnglish
Article number890
Number of pages66
JournalNutrients
Volume12
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 25 Mar 2020

Bibliographical note

A.A. was supported by a studentship from the University of Tabuk, Saudi Arabia (KSA) project code CF10434-63. JRS was supported by a Wolfson merit award from the Royal Society

Keywords

  • obesity
  • food outlets
  • fast-food restaurants
  • full-service restaurants
  • pubs
  • cafes
  • takeaways
  • food delivery
  • fish and chip shops
  • Food delivery
  • Food outlets
  • Obesity
  • Full-service restaurants
  • Fast-food restaurants
  • And fish and chip shops
  • Cafes
  • Pubs
  • Takeaways
  • OF-HOME
  • ENERGY
  • INEQUALITIES
  • ADULTS
  • TAKEAWAY FOOD
  • CHILDREN
  • RESTAURANTS
  • BODY-MASS
  • DIETARY
  • and fish and chip shops
  • CONSUMPTION

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