Current Urban Studies

Volume 1, Issue 4 (December 2013)

ISSN Print: 2328-4900   ISSN Online: 2328-4919

Google-based Impact Factor: 1  Citations  

Corner Store and Commuting Patterns of Low-Income, Urban Elementary School Students

HTML  Download Download as PDF (Size: 134KB)  PP. 166-170  
DOI: 10.4236/cus.2013.14018    4,423 Downloads   7,311 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

Background: While there has been considerable focus on the school environment in the context of childhood obesity, less is known about the environments around the school, particularly in low-income, urban neighborhoods. Purpose: The purpose of this study was to assess students’ corner store and commuting habits before and after school in a low-income, urban environment. Design: This was a cross-sectional study. Setting/Participants: Participants were 702 4th - 6th graders from 10 K-8 public schools where 82.1% ± 7.4% of children qualified for free or reduce-priced meals. Methods: Participants were surveyed about their corner store and commuting habits using a questionnaire. Body mass index was assessed using measured weight and height, and student’s demographic information was self-reported. Results: The majority of 4th - 6th grade urban students shopped in corners stores either in the morning (57.4%) or in the afternoon (58.5%). Nearly half (44.8%) reported shopping and purchasing in both the morning and the afternoon. Children reported spending approximately $2.00 per corner store visit. Approximately two-thirds of children reported that they walked to or from school. Children who walked to school frequented corner stores more than those using other commuting methods. Relative weight status was not related to corner store or commuting patterns. Conclusion: Many low-income children purchase food at corner stores before and/or after school making corner stores an important target for public health nutrition. While many children walk to school, those are more likely to frequent corner stores. Neither corner store nor commuting pattern was associated with relative weight.

Share and Cite:

Vander Veur, S. , Sherman, S. , Lent, M. , McCoy, T. , Wojtanowski, A. , Sandoval, B. , Karpyn, A. and Foster, G. (2013) Corner Store and Commuting Patterns of Low-Income, Urban Elementary School Students. Current Urban Studies, 1, 166-170. doi: 10.4236/cus.2013.14018.

Cited by

[1] Using coupons to encourage healthier child snack purchases in corner stores: results from the CHOMPS study
Frontiers in …, 2024
[2] Trends in school‐neighbourhood inequalities and youth obesity: Repeated cross‐sectional analyses of the public schools in the state of California
Pediatric …, 2023
[3] The community food environment moderates the relationship between active commuting to school and child weight status
Journal of Transport & …, 2022
[4] The Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children Spillover Effect: Do Siblings Reap the Benefits?
2020
[5] The Influence of Intrapersonal, Interpersonal, and Environmental Factors on Dietary Intake and Quality of Overweight and Obese, Low-Socioeconomic Status, Urban …
2019
[6] Neighbourhoods for Healthy Kids: A child-centred investigation into the role of the built environment on child body size
2019
[7] Youth Willingness to Purchase Whole Grain Snack Packs from New York City Corner Stores Participating in a Healthy Retail Program
2019
[8] The Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) Spillover Effect: Do Siblings Reap the Benefits?
2019
[9] The Influence of Intrapersonal, Interpersonal, and Environmental Factors on Dietary Intake and Quality of Overweight and Obese, Low-Socioeconomic Status …
2019
[10] downloaded from Explore Bristol Research, http://research-information. bristol. ac. uk
2018
[11] Viewing obesogenic advertising in children's neighbourhoods using Google Street View
Geographical Research, 2018
[12] Exploring perceptions of the Mexican sugar-sweetened beverage tax among adolescents in North West Mexico: a qualitative study
Public Health Nutrition, 2017
[13] Hierarchical Distributed-Lag Models: Exploring Varying Geographic Scale and Magnitude in Associations Between the Built Environment and Health
American journal of epidemiology, 2016
[14] Salud America!
2015
[15] Peer Reviewed: Association Between Student Purchases of Beverages During the School Commute and In-School Consumption of Sugar-Sweetened …
Preventing chronic disease, 2015
[16] Promoting an equitable Eating-out Food Environment through the application of a food justice frame: A case study
ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 2015
[17] Association between student purchases of beverages during the school commute and in-school consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages, San Francisco …
2015
[18] Association between student purchases of beverages during the school commute and in-school consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages, San Francisco Bay Area …
Preventing Chronic …, 2015
[19] Association Between Student Purchases of Beverages During the School Commute and In-School Consumption of Sugar-Sweetened Beverages, San Francisco Bay Area, 2013
Preventing chronic disease, 2015
[20] A randomized controlled study of a healthy corner store initiative on the purchases of urban, low‐income youth
Obesity, 2014
[21] Passive Commuting and Dietary Intake in Fourth and Fifth Grade Students
American journal of preventive medicine, 2014
[22] Concerning Limitations of Food-Environment Research: A Narrative Review and Commentary Framed around Obesity and Diet-Related Diseases in Youth
Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, 2014

Copyright © 2025 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.