May 6, 2008
Food Costs Likely to Boost Obesity in Poor
Healthier choices will be even more out of touch, experts say
Source: Philadelphia Inquirer
By Alfred Lubrano
Inquirer Staff Writer
Some of
the fattest people in
America
are among the poorest.
And with food prices
rising, the problem is likely to get worse.
Tianna Gaines, who
describes herself as impoverished and obese, knows this. At 5-foot-3 and 242
pounds, she lives on public assistance in Frankford and eats junk food because
it's cheap and more readily available in her neighborhood than carrots and
apples.
Besides, said Gaines, 28,
and a mother of three, "I don't have the money for Bally's fitness clubs.
And I can't run here. They shoot you."
More poor people may
suffer Gaines' fate, with the U.S. Department of Agriculture predicting food
prices will be up 4.5 percent throughout the year, due to high fuel costs,
weather problems, and the growing diversion of corn crops to make ethanol.
Globally, prices will rise nearly 50 percent, according to the president's
Council of Economic Advisers.
"The food crisis
will make obesity and attendant diabetes even more rampant," said
University
of
Washington
epidemiologist Adam
Drewnowski. "Fruits, vegetables and fish are becoming luxury goods
completely out of reach of many people. Consumption of cheap food will only
grow.
"Obesity is the
toxic consequence of a failing economy."
While more people from
every economic background are becoming obese around the world, the poor are
still outpacing the better-off.
A recent U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services study found that women in poverty were roughly 50
percent more likely to be obese than those with higher socioeconomic status.
In
U.S.
households
making less than $15,000 a year, 31 percent of the women are obese, according
to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In households with
more than $50,000 annually, 17 percent are obese.
University
of
Pennsylvania
epidemiologist Shiriki Kumanyika
and other investigators found that poor 15-to-17-year-olds - black or white,
male or female - were 50 percent more likely to carry excessive poundage than
nonpoor teens.
And a study by Drewnowski
last year showed that obesity rates in poor
Seattle
neighborhoods were 600 percent
greater than in rich areas.
Poor people frequently
live in "food deserts" - neighborhoods with few supermarkets. They
rely on corner stores and convenience marts for groceries, said Carey Morgan,
director of the Greater Philadelphia Coalition Against Hunger.
These are great places to
buy chips and soda, not so good for asparagus.
Concentrating on filling
their stomachs, poor, hungry people go for high-fat, high-sugar foods.
"They're not thinking about health - just getting through the day,"
said Mariana Chilton, a hunger expert at the Drexel University School of Public
Health, and principal investigator for the Philadelphia GROW Project, which
deals with nutrition and physical development among poor children.
Derek Felton, a community
organizer with the Coalition Against Hunger and a former poor, obese person,
agreed.
"I was the oldest of
seven, with a lifetime of no breakfasts to eat," said Felton, who is
5-foot-9 and went from 247 pounds to 185. "When we had the chance to eat,
we ate white bread to feel full."
All that corner-store
processed food is relatively inexpensive - artificially so. Researchers say
that many junk foods contain high-fructose corn syrup, made from
government-subsidized corn crops. Federal help keeps the cost of
syrup-containing foods such as sodas, fries and even burgers down. Drewnowski
said that healthful, unsubsidized foods like spinach cost five times more per
calorie to produce, thus driving up the price.
Food stamps are supposed
to help. But Chilton's research shows that the allotments families in
Philadelphia
receive are
not accounting for higher food prices.
As a result, families
often run out of food stamps by the second or third week of the month, Chilton
said.
The hunger can be
excruciating, said Gaines of Frankford, who lets her three children under age 4
eat whatever food is left after the stamps are gone.
It makes her all the more
voracious at the beginning of each month, when the new stamps arrive.
"You go without
eating, then gorge," Gaines said. "Then you go to sleep with a full
stomach. That's how the weight picks up."
It works that way for
lots of people. And with the current food inflation, even cheap foods are
getting more expensive.
"What choices can
poor people afford now?" asked Stella Volpe, a nutritionist at Penn's
School
of
Nursing
. "Will their diets get even
worse, and will hard times contribute to more obesity?"
Interventions to improve
the eating habits of the poor in
Philadelphia
have "failed miserably," according to Terri Lipman, a colleague of
Volpe's at the nursing school.
"We've told kids to
eat fruit and walk," she said. But fruits are scarce and walking in poor
neighborhoods can be dangerous, Lipman added.
Current school programs,
like dance aerobics, are making some inroads toward health, she said. And
Students Run Philly Style, which teaches poor kids to run in supervised
settings, is creating good results, said Heather McDanel, director of the
National Nursing Centers Consortium project, which works with Students Run.
"BMIs are down and
kids' self-esteem is up," she said.
Still, experts say that
if food prices continue to explode, even the better-off will seek more
fast-food meals.
"Bad, cheap foods
may become an even greater cultural mainstay," Volpe said, "with the
middle class going for less expensive food. And becoming more obese."
Contact staff writer alubrano@phillynews.com

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