Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1092323 SSM - Population Health 2016 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Since 2011 just 6 studies have been published employing GPS to quantify exposure to food environments.•The studies were generally only of moderate quality.•There were significant variations and challenges in the methods and techniques used.•GIS neighbourhoods may not well represent food environment exposures based on GPS data.

PurposeGlobal Positioning Systems (GPS) are increasingly being used to objectively assess movement patterns of people related to health behaviours. However research detailing their application to the food environment is scarce. This systematic review examines the application of GPS in studies of exposure to food environments and their potential influences on health.MethodsBased on an initial scoping exercise, published articles to be included in the systematic review were identified from four electronic databases and reference lists and were appraised and analysed, the final cut-off date for inclusion being January 2015. Included studies used GPS to identify location of individuals in relation to food outlets and link that to health or diet outcomes. They were appraised against a set of quality criteria.ResultsSix studies met the inclusion criteria, which were appraised to be of moderate quality. Newer studies had a higher quality score. Associations between observed mobility patterns in the food environment and diet related outcomes were equivocal. Findings agreed that traditional food exposure measures overestimate the importance of the home food environment.ConclusionsThe use of GPS to measure exposure to the food environment is still in its infancy yet holds much potential. There are considerable variations and challenges in developing and standardising the methods used to assess exposure.

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