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About Us * Urban Demographics and Food Availability * Diet and Chronic Disease in Baltimore * Formative Research Tools * Project Reports * Draft Communication Materials

ABOUT US

The Baltimore Healthy Stores project is being led by a research team from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health working in partnership with the Baltimore City Health Department and interested community organizations. The formative research, funded by the Johns Hopkins Center for a Liveable Future and the The Center for Adolescent Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, helped the team develop and identify barriers to healthy eating in the community and develop strategies to increase access to a nutritionally adequate diet, improve food security, and reduce the risk of diet-related chronic diseases in Baltimore, Maryland.

A pilot trial in Spring 2004 conducted at the Stop, Shop, and Save supermarket in East Baltimore helped the research team to strengthen and refine project messages aimed at store customers. The feasibility trial and its evaluation, funded in part by the Center for Adolescent Health and by the US Department of Agriculture, Food Assistance and Nutrition Research Program, will lay the groundwork for a city-wide grocery store intervention program in the future. The feasibility trial, which began in January 2006, will run through September of 2006. View the phases of the feasibility trial.>>

The BHS Team

URBAN DEMOGRAPHICS
AND FOOD AVAILABILITY

  • Race and socio-economic status: A neighborhood's socioeconomic status and ethnic composition influence the type of stores available to its residents. Wealthy areas inhabited by whites attract large numbers of supermarkets and convenience stores, which offer a wider variety of quality food at lower prices. In contrast, low-income minorities living in inner-cities have to rely on small stores with limited selection of foods offered at higher prices, while increasingly, the few remaining supermarkets close or move to suburban areas. (1)
  • Availability of Transportation: Lack of transportation and safety concerns further contribute to the difficulties faced by the urban poor to maintain a healthy diet. Cost, location and availability of food have been shown to be significant predictors of dietary choices in low-income populations (2).
  • Cost Disparities: Compared to suburban residents who have access to large supermarkets, urban dwellers can pay up to 37% more for groceries in their local communities (1).

DIET AND CHRONIC DISEASE IN BALTIMORE

  • Baltimore city lost 15% of its supermarkets between 2000-2002 (3).
  • Residents of areas underserved by bus lines and beset by a host of social problems rely on corner and drug stores for their groceries (3).
  • A recent survey of a West Baltimore neighborhood (4) found that 60% of adults were overweight (BMI >25) and 31% were obese (BMI>30).
  • Death rates from heart diseases in the city jumped 75% between 1990 and 1999, ranking as the number one cause of death of Baltimore residents in 1999 (26.6%).
  • Death rates from diabetes mellitus in African-American populations in Baltimore doubled in the same time period (5).

BALTIMORE HEALTHY STORES
Formative Research Tools

Manual of Procedures for Conducting Consumer Questionnaire (PDF File)

Consumer Screening Form (PDF File)

Consumer Questionnaire (PDF File)

Food Source Checklist (PDF File)

Map of Baltimore City Census Tracts (food source assessment conducted in 11 randomly selected tracts indicated in purple)

SCIENTIFIC POSTER: Results of Formative Research for a Food Store-Based Intervention in Baltimore, Maryland

PROJECT REPORTS

Project Update for USDA Grant (March 2006 Report)
Evaluation of a feasibility study of a food store-based intervention for low income residents of Baltimore City

Project Update for USDA Grant (May 2005 Report)
The Baltimore Healthy Stores (BHS) program has made many significant accomplishments in the period of 1/1/2005 to 3/31/2005.

Project Report to The Center for a Livable Future (January 2005 Report)
Increasing Food Security for the Inner City Population in Baltimore: Formative Research for Food Store-Based Environmental Interventions

Reaching Adolescents through Food Stores (December 2004 Report)
An Environmental Intervention Program to Improve Diet and Nutrition in East Baltimore

Formative Research on Adolescent Food Choice in Baltimore (Spring 2004 report)
This paper presents the results of formative research conducted to understand the predominant influences on African American adolescent diet in East Baltimore. Through in-depth interviews, participant observations, focus groups, and a photo diary, we explore adolescent eating habits, definitions of healthy, and environmental and familial influences on food choices.

Baltimore Healthy Stores
Community Leaders Workshop (January 16, 2004) Report
The second workshop with community leaders provided further opportunities to get needed input for the project's development from interested partners.

Baltimore Healthy Stores
Community Leaders Workshop (November 7, 2003) Report

The purpose of the Baltimore Healthy Stores Community Leaders Workshop was to build collaborations and rapport with organizations working to improve health in Baltimore City. This report provides summary results from the first workshop.

Community-based Participatory Research & Baltimore Healthy Stores: Goals, Progress and Future Steps (January 2004)
This paper discusses the Baltimore Healthy Stores (BHS) project in regards to the adaptation, application and advancement of the community-based participatory research methodology. Baltimore Healthy Stores aims to develop a culturally appropriate and sustainable environmental nutrition intervention in Baltimore City through research methods that engage the community.

The East Baltimore Nutritional Environment: Formative Research with Community Leaders, a Spring 2003 report (PDF File)

 

Slide Show: The Mission, Methods, and Goals Behind the Baltimore Healthy Stores Project (Powerpoint)

Student Report on Formative Research on East Baltimore Corner Stores, Spring 2002 (PDF File)

REFERENCES

  1. Morland K, Wing S, Diex-Roux A, Poole C. Neighborhood characteristics associated with the location of food stores and food service places. Am J of Prev Med 2002;22(1):23-9.
  2. Stokols D. Establishing and maintaining a healthy environment: towards a ocial ecology of health promotion. Am Psychol 1992;54:443-6.
  3. Klein A. Baltimoreans are hungry for supermarkets. Baltimore Sun, 05/21/2002.
  4. Clark JM, Bone LR, Stallings R, Gelber AC, Barker A, Zeger S, et al. Obesity and approaches to weight in urban African-American community. Ethn Dis 2001 Fall; 21(4):676-86.
  5. Baltimore City Health Department. Mortality Statistical Tables.1999. Baltimore, MD: 2000.


Baltimore Healthy Stores was featured in three recent articles: Baltimore Sun, JHSPH Magazine and Boston Globe.

See photos from the Spring 2005 Feasibility Trial.

See the work of artist ARCHIE VEALE

View photos from the Spring 2004 pilot trial

SLIDE SHOW PRESENTATION
Find out more about the mission, methods and goals of the Baltimore Healthy Stores project.

Photos above (from top):
Many residents of neighborhoods underserved by bus lines in Baltimore rely on corner stores like this one to supplement their groceries; full-scale grocery stores, though scarce in the city, do provide a variety of foods (middle photos), though healthy choices are still harder to find than in suburban stores; plexiglass barriers between shoppers and store owners provide security but make it difficult for shoppers to read labels or compare prices.



BHS Project Timeline

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